I’m somewhat obsessed by AI. That’s hardly remarkable. It’s so dominant in our lives that you are probably a bit obsessed too. Because it’s both terrifying in potential and somewhat incomprehensible in the science, it’s the elements around AI that fascinate, as much as what the technology itself does.
The growing volume of stories in financial reporting about a correction coming in the traded value of AI stocks are like catnip at present. I get Google alerts about the bubble bursting. That’s AI for you. Though I also get Google alerts for stories with headlines like Tinned Soup Will ‘Taste Better’ If You Add 1 Unlikely Ingredient To Your Saucepan. (No idea why ‘taste better’ is in quotation marks, as if the headline is sarcastically judging. Incidentally, it’s parmesan. Or cream. Or oregano – not really one ingredient in fact. And I heat tinned soup in the microwave, so in your face AI!)
I also had an alert last week that said Scotstoun Pool In Glasgow Closed Amid ‘Unfortunate Incident’. And yes, it’s EXACTLY the sort of ‘unfortunate incident’ you’d imagine would shut a pool. No idea what made AI think I’d appreciate something that leant hard into juvenile, puerile humour.
Read more:
- Artificial Intelligence is no match for the human heart
- Mounjaro for all! Will Wes Streeting’s plan for weight loss jabs on the NHS really work?
- The cost of education is letting down future generations – and we’ll all be much poorer for it
I’m also drawn to the lists of jobs that are not under threat from AI. They’re fascinating, as we report this week. They include dredge operators, bridge and lock tenders and logging equipment operators. Put together this sounds like a Philip Larkin verse, ironically if that had been a Larkin verse constructed by AI.
Obviously, one of the jobs most under threat is journalist. So, enjoy us while you can. This is clearly A VERY BAD THING. More journalists are needed, not fewer. If we didn’t exist, who would second-tier TV dramas have as prying bogeymen!?