Submitted by mossadnik t3_10sw51o in technology
I_ONLY_PLAY_4C_LOAM t1_j74f5si wrote
Reply to comment by ex_sanguination in ChatGPT: Use of AI chatbot in Congress and court rooms raises ethical questions by mossadnik
I don't think it's made very much of anything obsolete. It's still pretty shit. If anything, it's degrading the quality of content on the internet and making it less useful.
lycheedorito t1_j7556hw wrote
You can already catch ChatGPT responses on Reddit, ArtStation recently had been flooded with AI art... They now have a filter but it doesn't catch people being fraudulent about authenticity. Both of these things make me less inclined to engage or care. I suppose if you are completely unaware of it you might not notice, but people who are aware do. Is the idea that we'll all just tell AI to respond to everything for us, so we're just proxies for artificial conversation?
I_ONLY_PLAY_4C_LOAM t1_j758lje wrote
It makes the internet shittier
ex_sanguination t1_j74gk2s wrote
Oh for sure, it hasn't caused any major upheavals yet. But once it's refined it'll start to make a more noticable impact. This all being in the future. Give it 10 years? But who knows, maybe this is the same hoopla as self driving cars were back in 2015.
I_ONLY_PLAY_4C_LOAM t1_j74hkx2 wrote
The difference being that self driving cars work pretty well and are already being offered to the public.
ex_sanguination t1_j74i8h3 wrote
Right, but the fear that taxi services, truck drivers, and delivery drivers etc was blown out of proportion. Can it still happen? Sure. But people were saying by early 20s' there would be massive change in the workforce.
Trotskyist t1_j74wmh1 wrote
I mean, self-driving taxis are a thing now in several cities/states and are actively expanding into new markets. Obviously, it hasn't taken over yet and become the norm (if it does at all) but it's absolutely a growing industry.
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