I pretty much just gave up on that concept.Mike - my parents and teachers did the same. "Where'd you read that? How do you know it's true?"
Today - most folks stare at their screens, and swipe from one thing in their "feed" to another, without reading the details.
Ask them how they know something's true and you get a blank stare.
yeesh
Trying to find a polite way to point this out:The scary part is that they vote.
It's not just critical thinking, regardless of age. (and registered to vote doesn't mean they actually voted)
It's an educational system that doesn't teach critical thinking, and a cultural sickness of seeking pleasure and getting "informed" by social media and algorithmic news feeds - that depends on loss of critical thinking.
Speaking of which, don’t ever answer an unknown call. Let it go to voicemail. There’s a scam now where the scammer will record someone’s voice, just saying a few simple things., Then use AI to replicate that person’s voice saying all sorts of things.What does really concern me is that with AI expanding and so many bad folks out there in the world we'll reach a point where we won't know what to believe happened or not, is true or not unless you were actually there. Taking some public figure, or even just some unknown and show them making a remark or action from what looks like a person's phone or security cam, knowing what's really real will be tough.
That has always been the big question discussed by critical thinkers and white washed over by the people who are pushing it.What does really concern me is that with AI expanding and so many bad folks out there in the world we'll reach a point where we won't know what to believe happened or not, is true or not unless you were actually there. Taking some public figure, or even just some unknown and show them making a remark or action from what looks like a person's phone or security cam, knowing what's really real will be tough.
I let everything that isn't in my phone book roll over too, plus don't have a personally recorded "I'm not available" message since they can use that with AI to duplicate your voice. Being 45 years in IT, it has changed so much from the days when you'd get an email asking for money to get a prince's crate of cash out of the airport or such. Stats say that young folks in particular are targets for this stuff since they're used to answering everything and never watched how scamming sophistication has grown.Speaking of which, don’t ever answer an unknown call. Let it go to voicemail. There’s a scam now where the scammer will record someone’s voice, just saying a few simple things., Then use AI to replicate that person’s voice saying all sorts of things.
You will get a phone call from a loved one that sounds just like your loved ones saying that they are in trouble and need you to send money or some such thing. This type of scheme has already happened.
Be careful out there. It’s a crazy new world.
We'll end up with AI doing stuff and from there being abused, for simply one reason, money. For many it is the ability to scam, for businesses it is being able to create or service their product without needing to have so many salaries, health insurance, buildings with their costs and so on. What studio wouldn't use it if instead of paying millions to "stars" and staff, building sets and going places and spending a year making a film, they could have an idea and out the door in a couple weeks or a month.That has always been the big question discussed by critical thinkers and white washed over by the people who are pushing it.
Be aware about everything and question everything.
For me, I don't think the world needs such a dangerous weapon.
I just got an email yesterday with a variant of that.it has changed so much from the days when you'd get an email asking for money to get a prince's crate of cash out of the airport or such.
On the theme of critical thinking, it appears the photographer responsible for this image, a fireman in Belgium, stated it was intended as a joke. A search of "fire hose across railroad tracks" leads to several websites with similar stories: