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I hate it. But let’s be honest here: this is how most of the people react when they see for the first time what artificial intelligence is capable of and can be used for. They are afraid, they are scared, they think that this will make human creativity superfluous....

36,330 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr •via X (Twitter)

10 Kommentare

Profilbild von Anton P. 🇮🇹
Anton P. 🇮🇹vor 1 Jahr

People are speaking out of fear of the inevitable, based on stereotypes and misconceptions.

Profilbild von Chubby♨️
Chubby♨️vor 1 Jahr

exactly. Thats such a shame..

Profilbild von Mbongeni Ndlovu
Mbongeni Ndlovuvor 1 Jahr

It all depends how you look at AI If you think it will replace you - it will replace If you think it will make you better - it will make you better Just need to change your mindset And frame AI to more favourable outcomes

Profilbild von Koala
Koalavor 1 Jahr

Miyazaki put his blood, sweat, and tears into creating art. Imagine a machine spitting out your life’s work in seconds. It’s a bit degrading. But one way to look at it is the machine took inspiration from Miyazaki by taking his data and sharing that with the world

Profilbild von zomgthisisawesomelol
zomgthisisawesomelolvor 1 Jahr

I mean... he's not even wrong. p(doom) > 0. It's a bit like finding out about nuclear weapons in 1945.

Profilbild von Oli
Olivor 1 Jahr

this is the same guy who insists drawing everything on paper hes become just a grumpy old man he is probably one of the worst examples of what can happen to a good artist

Profilbild von Munehito Moro
Munehito Morovor 1 Jahr

Ghibuli movies are overrated both by Japanese and international audiences. Also Miyazaki seems to have conveniently forgotten that Spirited Away relied heavily on (then cheap) Korean animetors. He extols creativity but he’s just a cost cutter in disguise.

Profilbild von A Jay
A Jayvor 1 Jahr

This video is deceptive, import parts where deleted from the original.

Profilbild von Igor Tarasenko
Igor Tarasenkovor 1 Jahr

maybe the fear isn't about AI being better than us - it's about losing what makes creating art HUMAN. the messiness, the mistakes, the midnight inspiration. calling it arrogance misses the point.

Profilbild von hardian
hardianvor 1 Jahr

"It's an awful insult to life" Of course he will despise AI, The man literally build his life around art & design, he hones his skill with the level of mastery & discipline so that he can achieve the significance of what he is now. Changes need to be implemented slowly for him

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Roger Penrose, Nobel Prize-winning physicist and mathematician, explains why we should stop calling it AI and start calling it "artificial cleverness": He believes the entire field is mislabelled, and the label itself is doing damage. His objection is simple but cuts deep: "The name is wrong. It's not artificial intelligence. It's not intelligence. Intelligence would involve consciousness. Well, if it's a machine, it's not conscious." For Penrose, people have confused raw computing power with genuine understanding. "People have lost the plot. They've lost it in the power of computing. The thing is that computers have got so powerful that they've lost the thread of what they're doing. But I think consciousness is something different. It's not computational." He believes the term itself has hypnotized people into a category error: "People are so hypnotized. The trouble is that AI is a bad term. It means artificial intelligence. Now intelligence in my view is conscious. That's what intelligence is about." So he proposes a rename. Artificial Cleverness. AC instead of AI. To illustrate the distinction, Penrose draws on his experience teaching mathematics: "You have mathematics students. Some of them understand what they're doing. Some are just clever. They can repeat what they've learned. They know how to do it very cleverly. They can calculate very well, but they don't necessarily understand what they're doing." That gap, between calculating well and actually understanding, is the gap Penrose sees between today's machines and genuine intelligence. Cleverness can be manufactured. Consciousness, in his view, cannot. So the question worth sitting with: when we call a system "intelligent," are we describing what it does, or quietly assuming something about what it is?

Big Brain AI

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