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Showing posts with label Reuters.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reuters.. Show all posts

Monday, October 2, 2023

Time's Gift and Society's Curse: The AI Information Gap

 In a recent contemplation of our ever-lengthening days and the digital data that nourishes our artificial intelligence, I found myself at a crossroads. The ties between the celestial dance of the moon, the gatekeeping of knowledge by esteemed institutions, and the implications for our AI-driven future were not just intellectually stimulating but also profoundly urgent. With humanity at such a unique intersection, it's time to delve into these entangled narratives.

Ah, the days are stretching, my friends, not because the Earth suddenly took a yoga class but due to the moon inching away from us. It's a cosmic gift from the universe—extra minutes each day, and what are we doing with them? You'd think we'd be stuffing ourselves with wisdom from quality sources, but alas, the gatekeepers of this knowledge have other plans. Institutions like Reuters and Nature have decided to bar AI crawlers from grazing upon their intellectual pastures. Now, don't get me wrong, I'm all for intellectual property, but if knowledge is power, then hoarding it is a super-villain move.

So, what's the fallout? Imagine sending your child to a prestigious school, only to find out the curriculum consists of bathroom graffiti and Twitter rants. That's right, our AI is being educated on the digital equivalent of junk food. The internet is bursting at the seams with low-quality information, and if that's all our AI learns from, don't be surprised if it starts spewing alternative facts. A daily habit to consider? Maybe we should all spend a few minutes contributing to open-source knowledge bases. It’s a small act that could foster collective wisdom.

Now, don't you find it curious? Nature is giving us the gift of more time, but we're squandering it. I mean, come on, the universe is practically handing us extra pages in the book of life, and what do we do? Allow organizations to rip them out before we even get a chance to read the first line. This not only affects our personal enrichment but has sweeping global implications for the training and utility of AI. We're talking about a technology that has the potential to solve some of humanity's biggest challenges. But how can it, if we're essentially blindfolding it?

Let's not forget, there's a historical precedent to knowledge hoarding, and it never ends well. Whether it was the burning of the Library of Alexandria or more modern paywalls that lock away scientific research, we should have learned by now. Wisdom is the common heritage of humanity, and by keeping it under lock and key, we're impoverishing not just ourselves but future generations. It's like being given the recipe for world peace and then locking it in a vault—ridiculous, right?

So here we are, at an intersection of natural phenomena and human choices. The days are getting longer, but our collective wisdom seems to be on a diet. It begs the question: What kind of world are we shaping? One that maximizes the potential of both time and technology, or one that hoards knowledge like a dragon sitting on a pile of gold? It's a paradox that deserves not just our attention but immediate action.