AI's about to change everyday life

AI’s about to change everyday life

Bottom Line: From the very first sci-fi flick you watched or episode of the Jetsons, as the case may be, there’s been a fascination and fear of artificial intelligence. Like the Jetsons, most predictions and expectations have been wildly over-inflated. Remember that as employers are currently struggling to find enough people to fill all of their needs,that AI and automation is in the process of taking away all of the jobs right? Anyway, there is one concern I’ve always had and will related to the subject. Whenever the day comes that AI is smarter and more intuitive than us... We could have problems on our hands. 

In the meantime, MarketWatch just completed a story depicting the way AI is already impacting most aspects of our lives and a preview of what’s about to come. Among the examples:

  • The University of Copenhagen has created AI that has a greater than 90% accuracy rate in detecting academic cheating
  • AI now exists that enables employers to evaluate references for hiring purposes automatically
  • That same AI can provide an overall numerical rating for each job candidate based on the compatibility with the job opening
  • Drexel University's AI can precisely point to where someone will break a diet or engage in unhealthy eating

And this doesn’t factor in a myriad of other AI applications, in use, including for medical outcomes. Here’s a number that I found interesting. 37%. That’s the percentage of companies/organizations that currently use some form of AI. In other words, it’s not yet the norm. So, if you don’t come across it that’s why, not that you’ll necessarily know when you do, but we’re not too far away from the time when it will be the norm. And it will be evaluating, possibly everything, for outcomes. And at that point it may just reach the point when it’s either smarter and more intuitive than us or we’ll become paranoid making our own decisions without running it through AI outcome probabilities first. I’m not sure which is worse.


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