This fear of AI causing suicides seems word for word the same thing people say about social media causing suicides. That immediately makes me suspicious this fear is based on sensationalism instead of reason.
It's always the same: new thing + something bad happens = this new thing I don't like caused it!
But that's problematic when that bad thing was happening before the new thing came along.
The California plaintiff, known as KGM, testified that she began using YouTube at age 6 and Instagram at age 9
Letting kids watch selected YouTube videos or channels under time limits is reasonable, but if she claims she was watching for long periods of time with no supervision or guidance, this isn't a social media problem: This is a parent problem.
And when you're an adult, it becomes a YOU problem. There's a difference between an addiction and an unwillingness to make painful changes. Most things that are good for us are hard, unfortunately. Otherwise I'd be super fit!
Making my own personal tools sounds exciting. While I have some basic coding knowledge, I don't have the passion to spend hours trying to get small things to work. I think I'd feel most comfortable with AI running on my own hardware, not dialling home to someone though, so I'll have to look at the open ones you mentioned sometime.
I think using AI for drafts and prototypes and single use issues can open things up to a lot of people. There a point when that should transition to professional standards and real humans if a project grows though.
I've seen this in creative spaces, where people start a project with very basic skills and tools, and then upgrade and hire other people when it takes off. I think AI code and creative projects could follow the same trajectory without causing harm.
I thought it was the company listening in - No reason baby-produced content can't be used to train AI!
I went back and read it again. Good grief. Those poor kids. The helicopter is already going full steam.
Thank you. I'm sick of people catastrophising everything.
I think this obsession with 'society falling apart' is people who are unhappy but don't know how to change.
Tim's article promotes the idea that "My right to freedom" is more important than rules that benefit the community. It does encourage "the rules don't apply to me!" thinking.
As for 9/11, COVID is not the same thing. Anyone can be a terrorist, forever. But eventually we're going to have to let COVID run it's course. So to say that enforcing a public health mandate to save thousands of lives until we can get a suitable vaccination level in place is going to lead to Australia forever living in a quasi-lock-down? It's not the same situation, and I don't see it ending the same.
Our government is trying to sneak into more power, they definitely are. I think some kind of shake through would be very beneficial to Australia. But NOT in the middle of the pandemic when we have the option of getting our vaccination levels up to a herd immunity level.
I will pick my moment to protest so I'm less likely to cause my fellow citizens illness and possibly death.
I certainly don't want to live in America.
Despite the government's recent follow-America-in-international-politics stance, we have our own laws and culture over here. We are not America Lite.
Do you meant this Australian Constitution that we don't have? https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Senate/Powers_practice_n_procedures/Constitution
How on earth did you come to the conclusion that any country without YOUR constitution doesn't have a system of laws and accountability for our police, army and government?
Plus if it all goes pear-shaped, the Governor General can use the power invested in them by the Queen to dissolve our Federal Government and call an election.
This right here.
I'd rather the freedom not to die from COVID than the freedom not to wear masks.
If I wanted to be free like America, I would move there.
Shame on Techdirt for jumping on this bandwagon. The story you are telling lacks context both locally and internationally.
We are not the only country (even democratic) to use severe lock downs to manage the virus spread. Check New Zealand.
Locally, NSW botched their initial lock downs and let the virus out. Their rubbish government is now faced with the choice of letting the virus free (which has a long list of consequences) and coming in heavy handed. Considering the damage these lock downs do to the economy, and that the economy is what pays the government, I cannot believe they have taken this lightly.
It is an irrational fantasy that the government is on a mad power trip, two seconds from a complete reversal of all freedom. It shows a naive ignorance of what actually goes on in totalitarian states. Do we have secret police disappearing people? No. We have police publicly enforcing our legal laws. With freedom of the press to document it and full accountability.
If they don't start easing up once the vaccine roll out is at 80%, I'll come help protest.
Until then, keep your delusional special-snowflake "the rules shouldn't apply to me!" whinging to your Facebook echo chamber.
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This fear of AI causing suicides seems word for word the same thing people say about social media causing suicides. That immediately makes me suspicious this fear is based on sensationalism instead of reason. It's always the same: new thing + something bad happens = this new thing I don't like caused it! But that's problematic when that bad thing was happening before the new thing came along.
The California plaintiff, known as KGM, testified that she began using YouTube at age 6 and Instagram at age 9 Letting kids watch selected YouTube videos or channels under time limits is reasonable, but if she claims she was watching for long periods of time with no supervision or guidance, this isn't a social media problem: This is a parent problem. And when you're an adult, it becomes a YOU problem. There's a difference between an addiction and an unwillingness to make painful changes. Most things that are good for us are hard, unfortunately. Otherwise I'd be super fit!
Making my own personal tools sounds exciting. While I have some basic coding knowledge, I don't have the passion to spend hours trying to get small things to work. I think I'd feel most comfortable with AI running on my own hardware, not dialling home to someone though, so I'll have to look at the open ones you mentioned sometime. I think using AI for drafts and prototypes and single use issues can open things up to a lot of people. There a point when that should transition to professional standards and real humans if a project grows though. I've seen this in creative spaces, where people start a project with very basic skills and tools, and then upgrade and hire other people when it takes off. I think AI code and creative projects could follow the same trajectory without causing harm.
Everything about this is disgusting.
I thought it was the company listening in - No reason baby-produced content can't be used to train AI! I went back and read it again. Good grief. Those poor kids. The helicopter is already going full steam.
Down the rabbit hole.
Maybe reducing media influence is a feature, not a bug. Except that would require cunning and strategy.
Re: Re:
Thank you. I'm sick of people catastrophising everything.
I think this obsession with 'society falling apart' is people who are unhappy but don't know how to change.
Re: Re: Situationally illerate American propaganda
Tim's article promotes the idea that "My right to freedom" is more important than rules that benefit the community. It does encourage "the rules don't apply to me!" thinking. As for 9/11, COVID is not the same thing. Anyone can be a terrorist, forever. But eventually we're going to have to let COVID run it's course. So to say that enforcing a public health mandate to save thousands of lives until we can get a suitable vaccination level in place is going to lead to Australia forever living in a quasi-lock-down? It's not the same situation, and I don't see it ending the same. Our government is trying to sneak into more power, they definitely are. I think some kind of shake through would be very beneficial to Australia. But NOT in the middle of the pandemic when we have the option of getting our vaccination levels up to a herd immunity level. I will pick my moment to protest so I'm less likely to cause my fellow citizens illness and possibly death.
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
I certainly don't want to live in America. Despite the government's recent follow-America-in-international-politics stance, we have our own laws and culture over here. We are not America Lite.
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Do you meant this Australian Constitution that we don't have?
https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Senate/Powers_practice_n_procedures/Constitution How on earth did you come to the conclusion that any country without YOUR constitution doesn't have a system of laws and accountability for our police, army and government? Plus if it all goes pear-shaped, the Governor General can use the power invested in them by the Queen to dissolve our Federal Government and call an election.
Re:
I know, right? I actually created an account to comment, I was so dismayed. I come to Techdirt for sanity, not rhetoric.
Re: Re: Re: Re:
This right here.
I'd rather the freedom not to die from COVID than the freedom not to wear masks.
If I wanted to be free like America, I would move there.
He owns Sky News? I did not know that. I already thought they were fringe, now I know they're fake fringe.
Situationally illerate American propaganda
Shame on Techdirt for jumping on this bandwagon. The story you are telling lacks context both locally and internationally.
We are not the only country (even democratic) to use severe lock downs to manage the virus spread. Check New Zealand.
Locally, NSW botched their initial lock downs and let the virus out. Their rubbish government is now faced with the choice of letting the virus free (which has a long list of consequences) and coming in heavy handed. Considering the damage these lock downs do to the economy, and that the economy is what pays the government, I cannot believe they have taken this lightly.
It is an irrational fantasy that the government is on a mad power trip, two seconds from a complete reversal of all freedom. It shows a naive ignorance of what actually goes on in totalitarian states. Do we have secret police disappearing people? No. We have police publicly enforcing our legal laws. With freedom of the press to document it and full accountability.
If they don't start easing up once the vaccine roll out is at 80%, I'll come help protest.
Until then, keep your delusional special-snowflake "the rules shouldn't apply to me!" whinging to your Facebook echo chamber.