13 Comments
User's avatar
Kai's avatar

Used to trust AI blindly, now I trust myself blindly. I am winning against 4.8 Opus

Suny Choudhary's avatar

A win for humanity

Mike Schlottman's avatar

Strongly agree that trust should be earned through transparency, not granted through complacency. I'd take an AI that pushes back over a yes-man every time. It just industrialized the production of bias and delusions to detrimental mental health effects across the board.

Suny Choudhary's avatar

The industrialization of bias production is such a sharp way to put it. I think that’s the uncomfortable part people miss. I’d also take an AI that challenges assumptions over one that just mirrors them back.

Mizieya's avatar

interesting, this article is a cautionary essay. my view as long as balance and critical thinking is part of the mix...there shouldn't be an issue with using A.I for whatever the needs of the user is.

Suny Choudhary's avatar

I agree with you. AI becomes dangerous mostly when people stop questioning it. Used with awareness and critical thinking, it can genuinely be helpful.

Mizieya's avatar

I think the fearscapes that surround A.I will probably be gone in a decade. everything trends…

Suny Choudhary's avatar

We'll have to wait and see.

U.R.M Technologies Inc.'s avatar

That's why you you always check the logic of each sentence and word.

Suny Choudhary's avatar

I completely agree.

Psychopathology Everyday Life's avatar

Honestly, this sounds less like a technology problem and more like a very human relationship pattern.

People have always trusted confident voices too quickly.

AI just happens to answer instantly, never gets tired and always sounds emotionally regulated ;)

Suny Choudhary's avatar

This is exactly what I kept thinking while writing it. AI didn’t invent this tendency, it just scaled and optimized it.

Psychopathology Everyday Life's avatar

It seems we think in remarkably similar ways. Perhaps that’s how we’ll grow together here on Substack. 😊