this post was submitted on 15 Apr 2025
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I don't mind people using it for boiler plate stuff, and/or rough drafts to get a lot of the words typed out, so you can editorialize what's there.
When doing a lot of similar things, it can save a ton of time just having someone or something draw up a draft/starting point.
Any uses beyond this, are a non-starter for me when it comes to actual business use cases. The information that AI spits out in response to a query, is not, and should not be considered to be, complete in any way, shape, or form. It absolutely will need to be reviewed, edited, checked for accuracy and finalized by a human, before it is ready to be submitted for others to ingest. Zero AI content should be sent to anyone else until it has been reviewed and fully vetted by the person using AI to generate the content.
This has not been the goal to date. A lot of AI is trying to essentially eliminate entire segments of job markets, and bluntly, it's an insane mistake to think that, especially in its current form, that it could possibly do that, or even come close in any capacity.
It's at best a first-draft machine, but more likely it's a novelty that isn't worth the risk of using in production.
Time will tell, if nothing else.
I think the tech has merit, but not nearly to the extent that companies are investing into it right now.
It's moving so fast that it's going to be hard to curb it when things start going wrong.
Here comes sky net? I guess?