> It seems like a lot of people stop there, and either don't investigate problems where it might be a better fit.
The AI sceptics do think deeply about where AI might be a better fit. They indeed thought deeply about this, but for every hypthetical use case they could come up with, they had to conclude that
- AI has to become much much more reliable to be suitable for this use case
- the current AI architectures (as "the thing that bigtech markets") will likely by principle never be able to achieve this kind of reliability
This is exactly why these AI-sceptical people got so sceptical about AI, and also the reason why these AI sceptics got so vocal about their opinions.
The AI sceptics do think deeply about where AI might be a better fit. They indeed thought deeply about this, but for every hypthetical use case they could come up with, they had to conclude that
- AI has to become much much more reliable to be suitable for this use case
- the current AI architectures (as "the thing that bigtech markets") will likely by principle never be able to achieve this kind of reliability
This is exactly why these AI-sceptical people got so sceptical about AI, and also the reason why these AI sceptics got so vocal about their opinions.