Monday, January 1, 2024

When bad people use Artificial Intelligence

It's not that people would have to be bad to misuse artificial intelligence either. It could be by accident like the boy child of 13 who took pictures of all the girls in his school and then had an artificial intelligence program synthesize them all in pictures being naked. The problem with this is obvious. The problem is that an artificial intelligence program MIGHT be very accurate up to a certain point in it's depictions of females naked so this likely caused many many problems for students and parents and relatives and friends in this kind of situation.

However, the boy being full of Puberty likely thought this was a normal thing to do possibly. But, imagine all the damage from this one (Accidental?) use of Artificial intelligence.

But then, we go to people who are malicious like Terrorists. What is to stop a terrorist from shutting down whole power grids using Artificial intelligence? What is to stop terrorists from using Artificial intelligence to set off nuclear missiles of various countries against each other? The list goes on and on and on. There is literally no real limit to how bad this could get if people aren't very careful.

Even the head justice of the Supreme Court, John Roberts sent out a warning to the nation regarding Artificial Intelligence being used in Judicial matters and that he has already seen human rights affected negatively because of the misuse of Artificial intelligence in the U.S. in the courts of the U.S. already. And this harming human rights seems to be attacking the most people of color or brown skin of various kinds. So the very people already having problems are being targeted yet again by Artificial intelligence programs here in the U.S. and likely around the world.

So, unless we all are very vigilant many people will be harmed or die, likely more each year this century. 

What will the next century of Artificial intelligence be like by 2100 AD? It's hard to say. We have to survive as a human race and planet this century first.

No comments: