> Life will probably never be as good as it was for people 30 years older than me
> Nothing about the future looks particularly good, other than that medicine is improving.
How do you reconcile your thoughts with what the CEOs of these AI companies keep telling us? I.e. "the present is the most amazing time to be alive", and "the future will be unimaginably better". I'm paraphrasing, but it's the gist of what Sam Altman recently said at the World Government Summit[1].
Are these people visionaries of some idealistic future that these technologies will bring us, or are they blinded by their own greed and power and driving humanity towards a future they can control? Something else?
FWIW I share your thoughts and feelings, but at the same time have a pinch of cautious optimism that things might indeed be better overall. Sure, bad actors that use technology for malicious purposes will continue to exist, but there is potential for this technology to open new advancements in all areas of science, which could improve all our lives in ways we can't imagine yet.
I guess I'm more excited about the possibilities and seeing how all this unfolds than pessimistic, although that is still a strong feeling.
> How do you reconcile your thoughts with what the CEOs of these AI companies keep telling us? I.e. "the present is the most amazing time to be alive", and "the future will be unimaginably better". I'm paraphrasing, but it's the gist of what Sam Altman recently said at the World Government Summit[1].
Three ways:
* It's the job of CEOs to advocate the benefits of what they're doing.
* Those things might be true, for them.
* Those things might be true, from a global perspective, even if there are some people who are worse off. White-collar workers might just be those people worse off.
> Nothing about the future looks particularly good, other than that medicine is improving.
How do you reconcile your thoughts with what the CEOs of these AI companies keep telling us? I.e. "the present is the most amazing time to be alive", and "the future will be unimaginably better". I'm paraphrasing, but it's the gist of what Sam Altman recently said at the World Government Summit[1].
Are these people visionaries of some idealistic future that these technologies will bring us, or are they blinded by their own greed and power and driving humanity towards a future they can control? Something else?
FWIW I share your thoughts and feelings, but at the same time have a pinch of cautious optimism that things might indeed be better overall. Sure, bad actors that use technology for malicious purposes will continue to exist, but there is potential for this technology to open new advancements in all areas of science, which could improve all our lives in ways we can't imagine yet.
I guess I'm more excited about the possibilities and seeing how all this unfolds than pessimistic, although that is still a strong feeling.
[1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=15UZCAr3shU