this post was submitted on 06 Sep 2024
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{{labeling it "theft" is both legally and technically inaccurate.}} Well, my understanding is that humans have intelligence, humans teach and learn from previous/other people's work and make progressive or create new work/idea using their own intelligence. AI/machine doesn't have intelligence from the start, doesn't have own intelligence to create/make things. It just copies, remixes, and applies the knowledge, and many personalities and all expressions have been teached. So "theft" is technically accurate.
I think what you're forgetting is that intelligence, in general, is an emergent property of recording information and learning what actions to take based on them. The current work on AI is essentially trying to take this evolutionary behavior, make it less random, and compress the cycles of iteration down so that intelligence emerges quickly. This whole argument "It's not smart like I'm smart" with only surface level observation about it's current state and no critical observation about how intelligence came to be, just sounds really insecure.
I get it. Humans will likely not be the smartest thing in the arena soon. But stating matter-of-factly that AI is inherently different is born from an emotional viewpoint. I understand there ARE differences, but no more so then how there are differences between a human and a dog. Which if you're honestly looking at the situation is impressively close to human intelligence in such a short time.