Vern Scott
Sep 27, 2021

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My son is taking AI in his last semester of CS curriculum. Of course there are personal freedom and too-powerful machine issues in the future, for the moment it seems relatively benign (like potentially better police work and more efficient handling of widgets). Smart cars definitely have potential to drive much more efficiently, but what happens when they're hacked en masse? Does human inefficiency act as a sort of "brake"?

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Vern Scott
Vern Scott

Written by Vern Scott

Scott lives in the SF Bay Area and writes confidently about Engineering, History, Politics, and Health

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