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  3. AI is not inevitable.

AI is not inevitable.

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  • ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU ulrikehahn@fediscience.org

    @olivia @apostolis I don’t have any solution…it all feels pretty intractable to me at the moment, so I’m mainly struggling to understand the problem

    what AI is doing to publishing reform is as good an example as any (see below). There is an “industry force” at play here only in as much as there is an industry irresponsibly making available particular products.

    The actual causal pathways by which AI is breaking the system involves multiple distinct actors with very different motivations (outright AI slop/fraud, malicious actors, scientists using AI for research in ways that increase productivity but still leaves them in charge), each of these is different, but they are all combining to an overall negative effect

    what I don’t see is how we can solve anything (if we indeed can) without unpacking all that in detail

    https://write.as/ulrikehahn/is-ai-killing-scientific-reform

    olivia@scholar.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
    olivia@scholar.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
    olivia@scholar.social
    wrote sidst redigeret af
    #21

    @UlrikeHahn @apostolis I don't fully grasp what I did that makes one think I am against different analyses here? So each featured paper here analyses AI from a different angle pretty clearly with different actors: https://olivia.science/ai/#featuredresearch e.g. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/dkrgj_v1

    ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU 1 Reply Last reply
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    • olivia@scholar.socialO olivia@scholar.social

      @UlrikeHahn @apostolis I don't fully grasp what I did that makes one think I am against different analyses here? So each featured paper here analyses AI from a different angle pretty clearly with different actors: https://olivia.science/ai/#featuredresearch e.g. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/dkrgj_v1

      ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
      ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
      ulrikehahn@fediscience.org
      wrote sidst redigeret af
      #22

      @olivia @apostolis I don’t think I said you are against different analyses?

      the point I was trying to make is simply that what is breaking things right now is a confluence of forces and actors. If we are going to counter the destructive effects we need a systemic analysis of how these forces are interacting.

      I don’t take you to be someone who would object to that in principle 😉

      I suspect what we do have disagreements on is what the relative importance of these different forces and actors are, and what’s required to push back as a result (even in principle)

      olivia@scholar.socialO 1 Reply Last reply
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      • olivia@scholar.socialO olivia@scholar.social

        AI is not inevitable. Nothing in human societies is inevitable because we design them. Healthcare can be free for the public. Books can be bought instead of bombs. Universities can be free for students, and they can even receive a stipend to live off. Don't let companies dictate the future.

        Read more in section 3.2 here https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17065099

        lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
        lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
        lednabm@stranger.social
        wrote sidst redigeret af
        #23

        @olivia Absofinglutely.... true!!!

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU ulrikehahn@fediscience.org

          @olivia @apostolis I don’t think I said you are against different analyses?

          the point I was trying to make is simply that what is breaking things right now is a confluence of forces and actors. If we are going to counter the destructive effects we need a systemic analysis of how these forces are interacting.

          I don’t take you to be someone who would object to that in principle 😉

          I suspect what we do have disagreements on is what the relative importance of these different forces and actors are, and what’s required to push back as a result (even in principle)

          olivia@scholar.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
          olivia@scholar.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
          olivia@scholar.social
          wrote sidst redigeret af
          #24

          @UlrikeHahn @apostolis

          "Most importantly of all, resistance can and should take on many forms. Remember to rest and take care of yourself and your community. If talking to friends and colleagues is easy, then try to engage them on these issues. If it is not possible to do so, you can instead (or in addition) seek out allies online."

          https://olivia.science/before/#can

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          • ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU ulrikehahn@fediscience.org

            @apostolis @olivia the reason why this ultimately matters that pushing back against the real driver (the “organic” adoption of these tools by individuals) requires me to understand and engage with the perceived value and function these tools have for them…

            …and that means trying to understand both what they can and what they can’t do. Simply declaring that these tools are garbage (“semantically meaningless random text generator”) isn’t useful for actually productively countering AI use in this configuration…(if they genuinely were meaningless random text generators I wouldn’t be faced with the negative effects in the first place).

            the Fodor quote doesn’t feel like it’s aimed at that kind of understanding

            abucci@buc.ciA This user is from outside of this forum
            abucci@buc.ciA This user is from outside of this forum
            abucci@buc.ci
            wrote sidst redigeret af
            #25
            @UlrikeHahn@fediscience.org @apostolis@social.coop @olivia@scholar.social There is very little that could be credibly called organic adoption when it comes to AI. It is being fiercely pushed in support of multiple hundreds of billion dollar investment. People are being told repeatedly, in every channel, that AI is inevitable, is here to stay, etc. It is disingenuous to place this responsibility at the feet of students, throw up your hands, or ask someone else to tell you what to do about it. That kind of behavior from people empowered to know and do better is the problem.
            ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU lednabm@stranger.socialL 2 Replies Last reply
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            • olivia@scholar.socialO olivia@scholar.social

              AI is not inevitable. Nothing in human societies is inevitable because we design them. Healthcare can be free for the public. Books can be bought instead of bombs. Universities can be free for students, and they can even receive a stipend to live off. Don't let companies dictate the future.

              Read more in section 3.2 here https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17065099

              yhancik@thereisno.computerY This user is from outside of this forum
              yhancik@thereisno.computerY This user is from outside of this forum
              yhancik@thereisno.computer
              wrote sidst redigeret af
              #26

              @olivia this feels good to read again just the day after we (finally) had a first meeting in school to discuss AI (and of course I shared the paper!).

              But god, the belief in inevitability is so deeply engrained.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU ulrikehahn@fediscience.org

                @apostolis @olivia no disagreement with that!

                lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                lednabm@stranger.social
                wrote sidst redigeret af
                #27

                @UlrikeHahn @apostolis @olivia

                Wow.... interesting discussion, folks. Thank you. I'm a long way from university level experience, being an engineer in the electronic design industry for over 40 years. We've gone from one computer to share among engineers thru now to AI assistance across our individual computers. IMHO, we need to separate what AI can do from what they do. Humans, almost instinctively anthropomorphise everything. FFS... people still worship an imaginary AI in the sky and.... 1/2

                lednabm@stranger.socialL 1 Reply Last reply
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                • lednabm@stranger.socialL lednabm@stranger.social

                  @UlrikeHahn @apostolis @olivia

                  Wow.... interesting discussion, folks. Thank you. I'm a long way from university level experience, being an engineer in the electronic design industry for over 40 years. We've gone from one computer to share among engineers thru now to AI assistance across our individual computers. IMHO, we need to separate what AI can do from what they do. Humans, almost instinctively anthropomorphise everything. FFS... people still worship an imaginary AI in the sky and.... 1/2

                  lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                  lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                  lednabm@stranger.social
                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                  #28

                  @UlrikeHahn @apostolis @olivia 2/2 ... call it their god(s). I think the best resistance is to cooperate. After all, no matter how human these things can seem, they will never be more than tools. As humans, we "feel" a lot. We need to not let our feelings blind us to what these new tools can do. I'm no teacher. I've found that my method of communication doesn't do well explaining to others how to think, instead of what to think. I just know the tools we use evolve all the time....

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                  • abucci@buc.ciA abucci@buc.ci
                    @UlrikeHahn@fediscience.org @apostolis@social.coop @olivia@scholar.social There is very little that could be credibly called organic adoption when it comes to AI. It is being fiercely pushed in support of multiple hundreds of billion dollar investment. People are being told repeatedly, in every channel, that AI is inevitable, is here to stay, etc. It is disingenuous to place this responsibility at the feet of students, throw up your hands, or ask someone else to tell you what to do about it. That kind of behavior from people empowered to know and do better is the problem.
                    ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
                    ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
                    ulrikehahn@fediscience.org
                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                    #29

                    @abucci @apostolis @olivia I’m going to point you toward the scare quotes around the word “organic” in my post, which are there for precisely those reasons.

                    I am also going to push back against the notion that I am “placing the responsibility at the feet of students”: I am simply describing the (widely documented) problem in higher education that students are using AI tools in significant volumes *even where there use is explicitly sanctioned and forbidden*.

                    That is the concrete problem of AI now undermining higher education. Asking what “resisting AI” is supposed to mean for me in that context seems legitimate to me, and if it’s not, Olivia (who I’ve known for a long time as an academic colleague) is more than capable of telling me that herself.

                    abucci@buc.ciA 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • abucci@buc.ciA abucci@buc.ci
                      @UlrikeHahn@fediscience.org @apostolis@social.coop @olivia@scholar.social There is very little that could be credibly called organic adoption when it comes to AI. It is being fiercely pushed in support of multiple hundreds of billion dollar investment. People are being told repeatedly, in every channel, that AI is inevitable, is here to stay, etc. It is disingenuous to place this responsibility at the feet of students, throw up your hands, or ask someone else to tell you what to do about it. That kind of behavior from people empowered to know and do better is the problem.
                      lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                      lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                      lednabm@stranger.social
                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                      #30

                      @abucci @UlrikeHahn @apostolis @olivia

                      Wouldn't an approach where the AIs have to pass the class as students, be better. After all, regurgitating data is not the way to learn how to think. As for the pollitical/economics of the whole mess, well, that's on us to some extent. It's a problem educated people deal with all the time, even among each other. IMHO, humanity is still growing up. We've not abandoned our superstitions for the hard real wonder of actual nature. Is AI part of our nature?

                      ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU abucci@buc.ciA teledyn@mstdn.caT 3 Replies Last reply
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                      • jwcph@helvede.netJ jwcph@helvede.net shared this topic
                      • lednabm@stranger.socialL lednabm@stranger.social

                        @abucci @UlrikeHahn @apostolis @olivia

                        Wouldn't an approach where the AIs have to pass the class as students, be better. After all, regurgitating data is not the way to learn how to think. As for the pollitical/economics of the whole mess, well, that's on us to some extent. It's a problem educated people deal with all the time, even among each other. IMHO, humanity is still growing up. We've not abandoned our superstitions for the hard real wonder of actual nature. Is AI part of our nature?

                        ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
                        ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
                        ulrikehahn@fediscience.org
                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                        #31

                        @lednaBM @abucci @apostolis @olivia if I understand you correctly, you are suggesting we, in an sense, embrace AI and treat it in such a way that makes it better (ie accept it as students)? if yes, I don’t personally really want to make AI systems ‘better’ - they are causing huge damage and disruption at current levels of performance. I’d personally rather put a brake on that.

                        lednabm@stranger.socialL 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU ulrikehahn@fediscience.org

                          @lednaBM @abucci @apostolis @olivia if I understand you correctly, you are suggesting we, in an sense, embrace AI and treat it in such a way that makes it better (ie accept it as students)? if yes, I don’t personally really want to make AI systems ‘better’ - they are causing huge damage and disruption at current levels of performance. I’d personally rather put a brake on that.

                          lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                          lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                          lednabm@stranger.social
                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                          #32

                          @UlrikeHahn @abucci @apostolis @olivia

                          I understand what you're saying, and maybe language is not serving us well. You seemed to have juxtaposed helping it be better versus creating a disruption. And again, maybe I fully don't understand the dilemma. When I need very technical information that I can not recall or need help with, I would go to a book or a specification. Now, I can ask AI, check its results, and decide whether I can rely upon what's being presented. It's a tool... 1/2

                          lednabm@stranger.socialL 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • lednabm@stranger.socialL lednabm@stranger.social

                            @UlrikeHahn @abucci @apostolis @olivia

                            I understand what you're saying, and maybe language is not serving us well. You seemed to have juxtaposed helping it be better versus creating a disruption. And again, maybe I fully don't understand the dilemma. When I need very technical information that I can not recall or need help with, I would go to a book or a specification. Now, I can ask AI, check its results, and decide whether I can rely upon what's being presented. It's a tool... 1/2

                            lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
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                            lednabm@stranger.social
                            wrote sidst redigeret af
                            #33

                            @UlrikeHahn @abucci @apostolis @olivia 2/2 tools generally need calibration. Is it possible to use the disruption you speak of as a teaching moment? I don't know. Am I being foolish about the political/economic consequences of those benefitting from the disruption? Maybe. I agree with the original poster. We should have free education, health care, and representation in the way we govern ourselves. Problem there is, IMHO, the white elephant that is religion working against secular human values..

                            ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • lednabm@stranger.socialL lednabm@stranger.social

                              @UlrikeHahn @abucci @apostolis @olivia 2/2 tools generally need calibration. Is it possible to use the disruption you speak of as a teaching moment? I don't know. Am I being foolish about the political/economic consequences of those benefitting from the disruption? Maybe. I agree with the original poster. We should have free education, health care, and representation in the way we govern ourselves. Problem there is, IMHO, the white elephant that is religion working against secular human values..

                              ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
                              ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
                              ulrikehahn@fediscience.org
                              wrote sidst redigeret af
                              #34

                              @lednaBM @abucci @apostolis @olivia I think one of the problems, particularly in the context of education, lies in the idea that “now I can use AI to give me an answer and check the results”. It is precisely the “ability to check the results” in a particular scientific or academic discipline that higher education degrees are trying to provide. Leaning on AI to “find” answers by students is undermining the learning of the skills that underpin “the ability to check”.

                              lednabm@stranger.socialL 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU ulrikehahn@fediscience.org

                                @lednaBM @abucci @apostolis @olivia I think one of the problems, particularly in the context of education, lies in the idea that “now I can use AI to give me an answer and check the results”. It is precisely the “ability to check the results” in a particular scientific or academic discipline that higher education degrees are trying to provide. Leaning on AI to “find” answers by students is undermining the learning of the skills that underpin “the ability to check”.

                                lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                                lednabm@stranger.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                                lednabm@stranger.social
                                wrote sidst redigeret af
                                #35

                                @UlrikeHahn @abucci @apostolis @olivia
                                That's a great point. Teaching youth only to rely upon AI sounds like a mistake. I guess I have trouble with the notion that AI is anything more than a tool. Its applications threaten a lot, probably a lot beyond its scope, but not beyond its profit scam. Hopefully, some applications are identified as misapplications. I'm reminded of Huxleys Brave New World. Will AI be the soma drug to placate the masses, even though they were designed to be placated.

                                aoanla@hachyderm.ioA 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • lednabm@stranger.socialL lednabm@stranger.social

                                  @UlrikeHahn @abucci @apostolis @olivia
                                  That's a great point. Teaching youth only to rely upon AI sounds like a mistake. I guess I have trouble with the notion that AI is anything more than a tool. Its applications threaten a lot, probably a lot beyond its scope, but not beyond its profit scam. Hopefully, some applications are identified as misapplications. I'm reminded of Huxleys Brave New World. Will AI be the soma drug to placate the masses, even though they were designed to be placated.

                                  aoanla@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                                  aoanla@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                                  aoanla@hachyderm.io
                                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                                  #36

                                  @lednaBM @UlrikeHahn @abucci @apostolis @olivia At the risk of butting into this conversation, I think the problem here is that you think that "just a tool" is a neutral concept.

                                  Tools, by their very nature, change the way we interact with the world. Cars are "just a tool", but dependence on cars for transport has both positive and negative effects, because of how their use changes how we behave (and what other things we want to change about the world now "we" want to use cars all the time). Is "car-using humanity" healthier than "pre-car humanity"?

                                  In this sense, even if "AI is just a tool", the existence of cognitive tools *clearly* implies that use of them will change the way people behave - *regardless* of any concept of "applications being identified as misapplications". Dependence on a tool for *thinking* feels inherently more problematic than dependence on a tool for travelling distances...

                                  ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU olivia@scholar.socialO abucci@buc.ciA 3 Replies Last reply
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                                  • aoanla@hachyderm.ioA aoanla@hachyderm.io

                                    @lednaBM @UlrikeHahn @abucci @apostolis @olivia At the risk of butting into this conversation, I think the problem here is that you think that "just a tool" is a neutral concept.

                                    Tools, by their very nature, change the way we interact with the world. Cars are "just a tool", but dependence on cars for transport has both positive and negative effects, because of how their use changes how we behave (and what other things we want to change about the world now "we" want to use cars all the time). Is "car-using humanity" healthier than "pre-car humanity"?

                                    In this sense, even if "AI is just a tool", the existence of cognitive tools *clearly* implies that use of them will change the way people behave - *regardless* of any concept of "applications being identified as misapplications". Dependence on a tool for *thinking* feels inherently more problematic than dependence on a tool for travelling distances...

                                    ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ulrikehahn@fediscience.org
                                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                                    #37

                                    @aoanla @lednaBM @abucci @apostolis @olivia that’s very well put!

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • lednabm@stranger.socialL lednabm@stranger.social

                                      @abucci @UlrikeHahn @apostolis @olivia

                                      Wouldn't an approach where the AIs have to pass the class as students, be better. After all, regurgitating data is not the way to learn how to think. As for the pollitical/economics of the whole mess, well, that's on us to some extent. It's a problem educated people deal with all the time, even among each other. IMHO, humanity is still growing up. We've not abandoned our superstitions for the hard real wonder of actual nature. Is AI part of our nature?

                                      abucci@buc.ciA This user is from outside of this forum
                                      abucci@buc.ciA This user is from outside of this forum
                                      abucci@buc.ci
                                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                                      #38
                                      @lednaBM@stranger.social @UlrikeHahn@fediscience.org @apostolis@social.coop @olivia@scholar.social The fact that you can selectively ignore the strings of a marionette does not mean it is alive, part of our nature, or able to attend and pass a course. I suspect this is even obvious to AI!
                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU ulrikehahn@fediscience.org

                                        @abucci @apostolis @olivia I’m going to point you toward the scare quotes around the word “organic” in my post, which are there for precisely those reasons.

                                        I am also going to push back against the notion that I am “placing the responsibility at the feet of students”: I am simply describing the (widely documented) problem in higher education that students are using AI tools in significant volumes *even where there use is explicitly sanctioned and forbidden*.

                                        That is the concrete problem of AI now undermining higher education. Asking what “resisting AI” is supposed to mean for me in that context seems legitimate to me, and if it’s not, Olivia (who I’ve known for a long time as an academic colleague) is more than capable of telling me that herself.

                                        abucci@buc.ciA This user is from outside of this forum
                                        abucci@buc.ciA This user is from outside of this forum
                                        abucci@buc.ci
                                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                                        #39
                                        @UlrikeHahn@fediscience.org You stated you were pushing back against the characterization of your stance that you were laying responsibility at the feet of your students, and then immediately placed responsibility at the feet of the students! Are you really unable to see this in your own post?

                                        @fediscience.org @apostolis@social.coop @olivia@scholar.social
                                        ulrikehahn@fediscience.orgU ncf@types.plN 2 Replies Last reply
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                                        • aoanla@hachyderm.ioA aoanla@hachyderm.io

                                          @lednaBM @UlrikeHahn @abucci @apostolis @olivia At the risk of butting into this conversation, I think the problem here is that you think that "just a tool" is a neutral concept.

                                          Tools, by their very nature, change the way we interact with the world. Cars are "just a tool", but dependence on cars for transport has both positive and negative effects, because of how their use changes how we behave (and what other things we want to change about the world now "we" want to use cars all the time). Is "car-using humanity" healthier than "pre-car humanity"?

                                          In this sense, even if "AI is just a tool", the existence of cognitive tools *clearly* implies that use of them will change the way people behave - *regardless* of any concept of "applications being identified as misapplications". Dependence on a tool for *thinking* feels inherently more problematic than dependence on a tool for travelling distances...

                                          olivia@scholar.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
                                          olivia@scholar.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
                                          olivia@scholar.social
                                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                                          #40

                                          @aoanla @lednaBM @UlrikeHahn @abucci @apostolis

                                          Indeed! FWIW I touch on tools versus technologies in this context here if useful. https://scholar.social/@olivia/114937376930475208

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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