@johan_andersson There is a similar problem than with guns, here: it may be difficult to restrict their use to the "good" cases without allowing the "bad" ones.
But more generally, it’s not necessarily any applications of AI that are the core issues pointed out by the critics, it’s the price that society —as a whole— pays for having them.
@nojhan What about the price we've always paid up to now from *not* having #AI? I wouldn't claim there's an easy answer; my issue is with the one-sided reactionary contempt. Whether we embrace or extinguish AI, there is going to be a large #OpportunityCost either way. What I call #ableist is the attitude of refusing to acknowledge what AI can and does do to empower people with #disability, and how hurtful it can feel to be so dismissed and rejected.
[Side note: giggling at "johan vs noj[o]han"]
@johan_andersson There’s reactionary contempt on both sides. For instance, a lot of people become disabled because they help making AI, and it’s probably one of the most overlooked issue. Some use of AI can also be problem for some disabled people. Hence, I don’t think that the ableist issue is one-sided.
In the end, it’s a cost/benefit arbitration problem, with a lot of variables.
[It’s an annagram of the same name, only with two n]
@nojhan @johan_andersson
The debate gets distorted because the grotesquely wealthy are investing more money in AI than the entire rest of society has to spend on anything at all
And the investing class is emphatically speculating on the possibility of making everybody else unemployed
They’re engaging in this class war as a gamble with wealth they’ve encrusted due to 40 years of criminal tax policies
People are angry, and disabled people like us are as usual collateral
@johan_andersson No tool exists in an abstract vacuum of spherical definitions. Everything has a social cost. Workers exploitation is one, and there’s a lot more.
The question is: "are we sure of the performances & usefulness? Have you looked at the cost, and can we offer it?". To which the AI-should-be-regulated people observe that the usefulness is overstated and the cost understated, hence their (relevant, to be honest) conclusion.