Kniha AI T. H. Logwood

AI

The Big Lie: AI Is Not What It Claims to Be

Autor: T. H. Logwood
Jazyk: Angličtina
Väzba: Brožovaná
Dostupnosť: Skladom u dodávateľa
Odosielame za 14-21 dní
10.29
Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly reshaping economies, labor markets, health care, education,...

Informácie o knihe

Jazyk
Angličtina
Väzba
Kniha - Brožovaná
Vydalo
2026
Stránok
40
EAN
9798187291960
Enbook ID
53239583
Hmotnosť
69
Rozmery
152 x 229 x 2

Kompletný popis

Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly reshaping economies, labor markets, health care, education, security, and communication. Its core promise lies in improving human capability, by analyzing complex data at scale, automating routine tasks, increasing safety, and enabling new forms of creativity and discovery. The push for more data and the handling of data, is in nearly everyday discussion, and made into a national priority.

Yet the same capabilities that empower individuals, governmental bodies, and institutions can also concentrate power, erode privacy, intensify surveillance, and undermine autonomy on every level. A central tension runs through contemporary AI debates: whether AI will primarily function as an instrument of public benefit, governed by transparent norms and accountable institutions, or as a tool of control that accelerates a slide toward an authoritarian dystopia.

This treatise examines and contrasts the tangible benefits of AI, such as medical breakthroughs, more efficient public services, and accessibility; with plausible dystopian outcomes involving government overreach, coercion, information manipulation, and the replacement of democratic freedoms with the guise of optimization. This concern is grounded in a historical look at AI's development, tracing how shifting paradigms, funding incentives, and societal context have influenced AI's trajectories. It concludes with a reasonably balanced assessment of governance options: technical, legal, and cultural, suggesting that the direction AI takes depends less on "AI itself" than on institutions, incentives, and the values embedded in design and deployment.