Comment on Most U.S. adults don't believe benefits of AI outweigh the risks, new survey finds
Jerkface@lemmy.world 1 year agoI fully agree with everything you said. My point is more that if we look at AI as the culprit, we’re missing the point. If I may examine the language you are using a bit-
AI removes thought work.
Employers are the agents. They remove thought work.
it will also decimate workers.
Employers will decimate workers.
It would be smart to enact legislation that will mitigate the damage employers enabled by AI will do to wokers, but they will continue to exploit us regardless.
Using language that makes AI the antagonist helps tyrants deflect their overwhelming share of the blame. The responsible parties are people, who can and should be held accountable.
cheery_coffee@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
I don’t think you’re wrong either, but at the same time it’s not feasible for everyone to be their own agent and it’s not feasible to say employers can’t use AI.
I don’t know what the solution is, but I’m prepping for a sudden career change in the next few years.
Jerkface@lemmy.world 1 year ago
In general, progressive taxation can do quite a lot to ease the widening wealth gap. One such strategy is the robot tax. There exist other, perhaps better, legislative solutions, but more broadly we need to restore voting rights and diminish the influence the wealthy have on our political system so that smart, progressive legislation doesn’t have to fight tooth and nail against lobbying and other mechanisms that tie wealth to political influence.