this post was submitted on 01 Aug 2023
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LocalLLaMA
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Yeah they're eager to gain a monopoly on AI even (or maybe especially) if it results in average people missing out on all the potential advantages. I could list positive outcomes of AI for hours, enabling small and independent business to compete with current monopolies is one of the key advantages and that scares the rich, enabling people to access things like healthcare and key services easily scares them even more...
Imagine a world where a poor person such as you and a rich person like Elon both go to court on the same charge - your low paid legal team has about a dozen billable hours to research and it's done by one note especially motivated lawyer, Elons team have the top minds and the ability to have a vast team use the most expensive tools to dig up information and hire in experts - who is more likely to get off? But a good legal ai able to guide your tired lawyer to the right objections and fillings to make and which can in an instant pull up all the relevant information on the charge will mean that rich people no longer have such an advantage...
And take work and housing, you're working long hours and need somewhere to live so it's likely you'll feel pressured into clinging to whatever you can get because researching moving is hard, getting finance acceptance and everything is hard too especially when every attempt requires endless fees and forms and hoops to leap through - so when your landlord does something you don't like you just eat it, not only would the legal ai mentioned above totally change the landscape as you'll be able to simply say to your computer 'is my landlord allowed to let himself in to watch my sleep?' and it doesn't matter how poor you are or how little you know the culture or legal system the system will tell you your rights and how to enforce them. An ai able to ask you basic questions on your needs and search all available rental options then cross reference with other sources of information would be a game changer too, for regular people it could vastly reduce the stress and fear of housing -- that sucks for rich people who use the threat of destitution as a way of keeping people locked into bad situations.
These two AI implementations also result in another benefit to average people in allowing them to learn about and collect any help or resources they're entitled to, of an ai knew the law and my situation then it could tell me 'you're entitled to a carer subsidy as you look after your parents' or 'you can claim these items agsinst your tax, I've added them to the records and we can choose the best option when filling' or 'your car insurance is higher than other equal options, do you want me to switch it and save you $87?'
Again rich people have accountants that reduce their tax to zero by knowing exactly what to do while we have to struggle through purposely obtuse and opaque systems so we end up paying more than we should and missing out on everything we're entitled to - all that extra money we pay because we simply don't know we have other options goes into rich peoples pockets, this even more true for people with physical and educational handicaps, people in difficult situations, immigrants, victims of domestic abuse or poor home situations...
Something that really scares them too is the possibility of the ai telling you 'according to our personal records kept privately on your secure home system you purchased a product that has been discovered to have been manufactured using illegal and dangerous materials, do you want to join the class action lawsuit against Dupont?' then 18 months later it says 'the Dupont lawsuit was successful, do you want me to send them the information required to claim $1530?'
The law is actually often pretty fair and reasonable in many cases, long debates go into making sure it all makes sense and is even handed - the problem is access to the law is entirely dependent on how much money you have, being able to file a case with all the right boxes ticked would ruin their little game.
And that's only one strand of not especially complex AI, all tasks a LLM matched with verifier networks and task structuring could do - probably only one or two generations beyond the current models. Enabling collaborative design and community projects is another thing that could hugely benefit regular people, DRM ink for printers exists because most people don't know they have other options and they feel brand names are more supported but an ai able to code printer drivers on the fly gets rid of that issue as everything becomes true plug and play but also it allows consumers to select better options - I obsessively search tech stuff when I'm going to make a purchase but still often discover better options I would have selected, being able to say 'what are my best options for buying a printer?' and it asks a couple of questions then gives me a short list of ones I can actually get and include comparisons and test data in its thinking which would have taken me an evening in pandas just to get a ballpark understandong of - and it's looked at all the help forums telling me things like 'people have reported issues with this printer and your current hardware, though we could upgrade your firmware to circumvent problems'
The possibilities for AI making our lives better are huge, when I hear people who have nothing good to say about it all I can think it's the they must consider everyday people being able to live better lives as a bad thing, they must see it as something that threatens their existence as a modern day robber baron.
Exactly why they want corporations in charge of them, but it'll only delay the inevitable.