Artificial Intelligence Quotes

Quotes tagged as "artificial-intelligence" Showing 331-360 of 1,320
Roger Spitz
“Today, AI seems to be the answer to everything, irrespective of the question. If technology is determining outcomes on our behalf, our agency is curtailed and our choices may be beyond our control.”
Roger Spitz, Disrupt With Impact: Achieve Business Success in an Unpredictable World

Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.
“Some business leaders think that AI is going to complicate things. But AI is likely going to simplify much more than it complicates.”
Hendrith Vanlon Smith Jr.

Abhijit Naskar
“Labor of AI (The Sonnet)

Asking AI to help you
write, is not writing.
Asking AI to tune your
voice, is not singing.

Asking AI to help you
paint, is not painting.
Asking AI to help you
code, is not coding.

Asking AI to help you
create, is not creativity.
Asking AI to build your
dream, is not dreaming.

Asking AI to narrate
books, is not storytelling.
AI oughta do manual labor,
so humans can do the creating.”
Abhijit Naskar, The Divine Refugee

Harry Turtledove
“Are you sure you want to do that?" The artificial intelligence that ran the ship put no true inflection into its word, but Smith knew his polite query meant something more like: are you out of your ever-loving mind?
Harry Turtledove, Isaac's Universe Volume Three: Unnatural Diplomacy

“At the core of the most extreme dangers from AI is the stark fact that there is no particular reason that AI should share our view of ethics and morality.”
Ethan Mollick, Co-Intelligence: The Definitive, Bestselling Guide to Living and Working with AI

“Poetry is deeply personal. It's madness, it's abstract. Not AI's 'forte'
Madness, they say, is akin to genius, and poetry is the zenith of both, a realm AI has yet to conquer...!!”
Monika Ajay Kaul

“AI's ambition: 'Let's automate tasks.'
ML's efficiency: 'Let's optimize outcomes.'
GenAI's confidence: 'Let's automate success!”
Brahmanand Savanth

Daniel Wieser
“Die Intelligenz ist heute viel weiter fortgeschritten als früher. Sie befindet sich nur nicht mehr im Menschen.”
Daniel Wieser

“The problem is not that a paper-clip-maximizing AI will arise in the future and turn the universe into paper clips. The maximizers are already here. Any consequences too subtle to measure--environmental costs, civic discord, troubled diplomatic relations--are simply omitted from the score.”
Kelly Clancy, Playing with Reality: How Games Have Shaped Our World

Abhijit Naskar
“Asking AI to help you create, is not creativity.”
Abhijit Naskar, The Divine Refugee

Abhijit Naskar
“AI oughta do manual labor, so humans can do the creating.”
Abhijit Naskar, The Divine Refugee

“Science, once a triumph of human intelligence, now seems headed into a morass of rhetoric about the power of big data and new computational methods, where the scientists' role is now as a technician, essentially testing existing theories on IBM Blue Gene supercomputers.
   But computers don't have insights. People do. And collaborative efforts are only effective when individuals are valued. Someone has to have an idea. Turing at Bletchley knew—or learned—this, but the lessons have been lost in the decades since. Technology, or rather AI technology, is now pulling "us" into "it." Stupefyingly, we now disparage Einstein to make room for talking-up machinery.”
Erik J. Larson, The Myth of Artificial Intelligence: Why Computers Can’t Think the Way We Do

Anthony T. Hincks
“Who does A. I. (artificial intelligence) benefit? The people it replaces or the moguls who dominate and saturate the market with pseudo human intelligence.
It may make life easier for some, but as you know, humanity can be a waste at times.”
Anthony T. Hincks

Norbert Wiener
“If we use, to achieve our purposes, a mechanical agency with whose operation we cannot efficiently interfere once we have started it, because the action is so fast and irrevocable that we have not the data to intervene before the action is complete, then we had better be quite sure that the purpose put into the machine is the purpose which we really desire and not merely a colorful imitation of it.”
Norbert Wiener

Abhijit Naskar
“Humanovator (The Sonnet)

Chatgpt pampers plagiarism,
Facebook pampers conspiracy.
More and more innovations are
becoming catalyst of catastrophe.

Note, I didn't mention the birdie,
Very mindful, very demure.
Facebook can still be repaired,
but once a MAGA, always a sewer.

Innovation that outlives its usefulness,
is no longer innovation but carnivoration.
Innovators not in touch with soil-n-roots,
are predators of the concrete jungle.

The golden age of startups is behind us,
today it's mostly filth, fraud and smut.
Amidst the crowd of trust fund termites,
be the humanovator to humanize the world.”
Abhijit Naskar, The Divine Refugee

Abhijit Naskar
“Chatgpt pampers plagiarism,
Facebook pampers conspiracy.
More and more innovations are
becoming catalyst of catastrophe.”
Abhijit Naskar, The Divine Refugee

Abhijit Naskar
“Biologists often diss the potential of machine, just like gadgeteers are oblivious to life. Life is a cosmic miracle, machines are a human one, and with added purpose, machines could be the mightiest defense of life.”
Abhijit Naskar, World War Human: 100 New Earthling Sonnets

Aryan Zarnikhi
“The future of marketing lies at the intersection of AI and human creativity. Those who harness the power of data and automation will not only thrive but lead in the new era of innovation.”

— Aryan Zarnikhi, The Rise of AI in Marketing: Unleashing the Power of Data and Automation”
Aryan Zarnikhi, The Rise of AI in Marketing: Unleashing the Power of Data, Automation, and Personalized Strategies to Drive Business Success in the Digital Age

“Technology sneaks up on us. Suddenly, OpenAI’s ChatGPT bursts onto the scene, and within months, what seemed like overnight, its user base exploded to over 150 million by May 2023. ChatGPT swiftly became a term as common as household names. The entire world buzzed about artificial intelligence—a concept so potent it captured global imaginations.

Yet, AI isn’t a sudden phenomenon. But if it wasn’t for putting a friendlier face on AI, democratizing it’s use, we may have been waiting longer.”
David Lloyd

“In human terms, think of AI as an ‘intelligent machine.’ While various definitions exist, at its core, AI is about machines performing tasks typically done by humans, predominantly making predictions. Will you buy a new dress? What’s tomorrow’s weather? Will a stock price rise or fall? Is that a cat or a dog in the picture? Draft an email for a job application or even paint a picture of your favorite vacation spot in the style of Monet.”
David Lloyd

“A common question I encounter is the impact of AI on jobs. Reflecting on the diverse age and experience range among my family, friends, and colleagues, I recall a poignant remark: “AI won’t eliminate your job, but the person who understands AI will.” This isn’t new; from PCs to internet and mobile, every tech wave requires us to adapt, often rapidly. AI will be no different, demanding even swifter adaptation”
David Lloyd

“Creating human-level intelligence is not just allowed by the laws of nature, we even have an existence proof: people.”
Tim Rocktäschel, Artificial Intelligence: 10 Things You Should Know

“While we are only at the beginning of incorporating AI into scientific processes, AI has already found adoption in a wide range of scientific domains where it is accelerating the discovery of new explanatory knowledge. The next phase in the evolution of the scientific process will likely see (semi)autonomous AI scientists that radically transform the pace at which science is done.”
Tim Rocktäschel, Artificial Intelligence: 10 Things You Should Know

“Some AI safety challenges are not technical problems. They might not have a technical solution, but instead they pose novel moral dilemmas simply because AI is taking actions in the world.”
Tim Rocktäschel, Artificial Intelligence: 10 Things You Should Know

Anupam S. Shlok
“In a hypothetical future where all humans have been wiped out by a catastrophic event, but AI has advanced to the point where it can autonomously create and maintain robotic systems, what kind of world would emerge?

Would the AI continue to evolve and run a machine-driven society, or would it face an existential crisis, questioning its purpose without humans to serve?

Could AI itself turn nihilistic, or would it find new meaning in a world devoid of human life? And taking this even further — what if humans, as we know them, were actually robots created by a long-extinct civilization?
Perhaps, over time, we learned reproduction and invented the idea of biological existence, imagining our own purpose, unaware of our artificial origins.”
Anupam S. Shlok, Global Cinematic Treasures: 101 Must-See Modern Films

Abhijit Naskar
“Warning to the Spellbound
(Sonnet from the future)

In our times we wrote our own literature,
In our times we wrote our own music.
In our times we wrote our own code,
In our times we wrote our own poetry.

Ours was the last human generation,
where humans shaped their own society.
The day you traded comfort for originality,
you forfeited the right to life and liberty.

Today you are nothing, you mean thing,
you are no more significant than woodworm.
You are just puppets to large gibberish models,
backboneless victims of algorithm addiction.

If you can still hear my voice, AI is still adolescent,
Once in control, it'll erase all records of humanness.
We can't yet treat human bias, 'n here comes AI bias,
Abandon all non-vital tech, return to simpler ways.”
Abhijit Naskar, Brit Actually: Nursery Rhymes of Reparations

Abhijit Naskar
“AI is the white colonizer of the modern world, headed to destroy everything that is sweet, original and meaningful about human life. Unless you clip its wings while there is time, like the British empire, AI empire will bring back the dark ages, not light.”
Abhijit Naskar, Brit Actually: Nursery Rhymes of Reparations

“Over and over, we see the ideology of Cartesian dualism in AI: the fantasy that Al systems are disembodied brains that absorb and produce knowledge independently from their creators, infrastructures, and the world at large. These illusions distract from the far more relevant questions: Whom do these systems serve? What are the political economies of their construction? And what are the wider planetary consequences?”
Kate Crawford, Atlas of AI: Power, Politics, and the Planetary Costs of Artificial Intelligence