Television and Film
Ai feels like the next .com bubble
Probably is for the most part. I've been using copilot at work and while it is convenient (like auto complete on steroids), it is nowhere near where it could be used to do my job. I see it being parroted as a possiblity for businesses to cut their labor costs for some stock increases, but not much else.
It's already replacing people's jobs. If it's not replacing your job, that's great! But I give it just a year or two if nothing changes to protect workers.
It is.
Nah, there is real business use and efficiency gains to be had. But it's not going to replace divisions of people without burning down the planet or a significantly more efficient approach.
E.G - Being able to train it on your business data, processes, proposals, products, and enabling employees to gather information is extremely useful. "Copilot grab statement of objectives and place them in our company proposal template. Also grab our past performance data from similar projects and the proposal language." Then you take it from there, remove the crap, rewrite what is good. That's hours of tracking down shit saved. Companies are going to eat that up and rightly so.
Sure, there are a few use cases just like there were a few websites left after the .com bubble burst.
The emperor has no AI
It's not even "AI", FFS. They're all LLMs in different costumes, being paraded around like cheat codes to world domination. 🤦🏽♂️
Before a bunch of people come at you...
In the Machine Learning field, LLMs are in fact considered a kind of AI. So developers, researchers and so forth in the field all would be fine saying AI in these instances if they didn't need to be more specific.
I'm only posting to try to tell you in a "non-holier than thou internet way" because I also just found this out recently.
While I appreciate the heads up, I've had far more people in the industry complaining about the intentional misnomer (some even consider it irresponsible) on the part of the media.
Elsewhere in the segment, Khan discussed the FTC's lawsuit against Amazon, stating that the FTC alleges the company is a monopoly maintained via illegal practices (exorbitant seller fees, shady ads). They also touched on the FTC's lawsuit against Facebook, tech company collusion via AI, corporate consolidation, exorbitant drug prices and more.