If AI gets really good, manual labor automation won't be far behind, as the AI itself will be applied to robotics and AI research.
The only thing of value left will be natural resources.
If AI gets really good, manual labor automation won't be far behind, as the AI itself will be applied to robotics and AI research.
The only thing of value left will be natural resources.
No, all you need for this is a digital signature and to publish the public key on an official government website. And maybe for platforms like YouTube and TikTok to integrate check status in their UI (e.g. flag any footage of candidates that was not signed by the government private key as "unverified").
How would an NFT help in any way?
However I’m not afraid of it taking my job because someone still needs to tell it what to do
Why couldn't it do that part too? - purely based on a simple high-level objective that anyone can formulate. Which part exactly do you think is AI-resistant?
I'm not talking about today's models, but more like 5-10 years into the future.
More like 2% for a casino.
not having its AI efforts actually change product usage
Are you ignoring Github Copilot?
Not directly related, but you can disable chat history per-device in ChatGPT settings - that will also stop OpenAI from training on your inputs, at least that's what they say.
Not from memory, without looking at the original during painting - at least not to this level of detail. No human will just incidentally "learn" to draw such a near-perfect copy. Not unless they're doing it on purpose with the explicit goal of "learn to re-create this exact picture". Which does not describe how any humans typically learn.
It is a point against those "it's just like humans learning" arguments.
This is another "use a black wallpaper to hide the notch" situation. Kinda funny, but ultimately meaningless.
This guy has a pretty good mini-series about Quibi's failure https://youtu.be/kVJGTaE7Eio
Basically they are Hollywood people who were all like: all the other Hollywood people we know, who we talked about it with, loved it (the producers, who would make content for it).
But they never really checked whether the consumers - the people who would be actually paying for the service - even liked it enough to pay for it.
That's assuming they have that goal. The goal of survival and reproduction exists because of natural selection (those that don't have that goal simply don't make it into the next generation, when competing against those that do).
But that doesn't necessarily apply to AI systems. At least while humans have a say in which systems survive and get developed further, and which ones get scrapped. When humans control the resources, the best way to get a sizable allocation of them is by being useful to humans (or at least making them believe that).