Social Media of the Future will be Human-to-AI
The bootstrap problem is the biggest problem with social media. People with zero followers receive no comments on their posts, which removes any motivation for them to publish. With AI, you have a vast array of personalities at your disposal who are prepared to respond in a meaningful way to any posted content.
Furthermore, because AI responses can be crafted to be extremely pertinent and because most people don’t have a large number of followers, it turns out that most people will start finding a lot of value in the feedback they receive from AI.
Those who argue that bots are annoying fail to recognize that it will eventually be impossible to tell a bot from a human online.
If your only concern is getting likes, comments, and retweets and you can’t tell the difference between a human and a bot, what’s the point?
The ultimate goal is for a horde of bots to flood social media, instantly rewarding anyone who posts. Within their own online bubble, everyone will be a superstar. This will paradoxically encourage more “influencers” to attend offline events. More and more, the real world will be the only place where you can establish your humanity and make true human-human connections.
Humans will have no chance of competing with the hyper-stimulating bots that populate the online world (also known as “the Matrix”). Good luck believing that a real person is behind email, porn, Twitter, or discussion forums. People’s preference for audio and video as the main forms of online interaction is another effect of the commoditization of written content. Although there are deep imitations of us in those media, AI is still a long way from being able to do so.
Artificial intelligence (AI), also referred to as the industrial revolution (IR) 4.0, will alter not only the way we go about our daily lives and interact with others but also how we perceive ourselves. This article will first define AI, and then discuss how it has affected the industrial, social, and economic developments that have affected humanity in the twenty-first century, before proposing a set of ethical guidelines for AI.
There are many different ways to define artificial intelligence (AI); for some, it is the developed technology that enables machines and computers to behave intelligently. In a nutshell, it is artificial intelligence that has been created by humans and shown by machines. These capabilities of human-made tools that mimic the “cognitive” skills of the inborn intelligence of human minds are referred to as “artificial intelligence” (AI).
AI has been incorporated into nearly every aspect of our daily lives as a result of the recent rapid advancements in cybernetic technology. Some of these advancements, like optical character recognition and the Siri (speech interpretation and recognition interface) information-finding tool on computers, may no longer be considered to be examples of artificial intelligence because they are so pervasive in our daily lives and we are accustomed to them.
Computer programs can think and learn independently thanks to artificial intelligence (AI). Artificial intelligence is created by simulating human intelligence in machines to perform tasks for which we would typically turn to humans. Based on their capabilities, weak, strong, and super AI are the three main categories of artificial intelligence.
Weak AI: Concentrates on a single task and is constrained by those capabilities (common in daily life).
Strong AI: Can understand and learn any intellectual task that a human being can (researchers are working toward strong AI).
Super AI: Exceeds human intelligence and is capable of doing any task better than a human (still a concept).