Futurists are concerned that we are glided into AI-fueled dystopia. This makes humanity acquiesce to ethical, decision-making and intellectual powers to corporate algorithmic gags.
Christerson, who happens to be Swedish Prime Minister, recently confirmed on a Scandinavian news site that he would ask Chatgupt “a second opinion” about his governance strategy.
“I use it quite often,” Kristersson said in an interview. “For anything else for a second opinion. What did the others do?
As expected, Christerson was immediately dragged over for his comment. “The more he relies on AI for simple things, the greater the risk of overconfidence in the system,” said the responsible artificial intelligence professor at Umeå University, chatting with the same exit he interviewed PM. “It's a slippery slope. You need to request that you can guarantee reliability. I didn't vote for ChatGpt.”
PM has also been criticized by various other outlets, and it appears that governance via chatbots is not the ideal route for Western civilization. “It's a shame for Sweden that AI is primarily speculating,” writes Signe Krantz of Afton Bladet. “Chatbots want to write more about what you think you want than what you need to hear.”
Krantz points out the good points. This means that chatbots can be incredibly sikopantic and paranoid. If you have a leader asking the main questions of a chatbot, you can imagine a scenario where the algorithms in a software program will only help strengthen the existing privileges of that leader (or you can push them further into unknown territory). Thankfully, it doesn't seem like many politicians still feel the need to use ChatGpt as a compelling thing.
Whether Kristersson really relies on chatbots while navigating leadership duties, or in fact, trying to name and hip popular tech products during interviews, is clear that AI is increasingly being used to outsource the intellectual capabilities of being the domain of the human mind just a few years ago. It's a dangerous situation as the technology industry has already fertilized its ability to think for 20 years. How many fools can we all get? I think we are all trying to find it.
