yào要ràng让AIwèi为wǒ men我们fú wù服务,tā它jiù就bù néng不能jiǎ zhuāng假装zì jǐ自己shì是rén人
The author believes that if AI is truly going to help people, it must not pretend to be the same as humans.
Many tech companies think first about making money, not protecting users, so people should be careful with AI.
AI is not neutral either, because humans made it, and it can also learn the biases already found online, such as gender inequality, racial discrimination, and the gap between rich and poor.
As a result, the answers AI gives may seem very “smart,” but in fact they may just be repeating old problems in a new way.
AI can quickly process a lot of information and can also write like a human, but it does not truly understand human life, feelings, or relationships.
It does not care about others, and it cannot take responsibility for its own decisions.
So in important areas like education, healthcare, job searching, policing, and war, we cannot easily leave decisions to AI.
We also need to ask early and clearly: Who made this system?
How does it work?
Who will benefit?
Who will bear the bad results?
Only by holding powerful companies and institutions responsible can technology become fairer and avoid harming human dignity and life.