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TORLEY 🍉🎹's avatar

I continue to adore the meticulous work you put into these thoughtful compilations! 🙌

It's truly unfortunate that sooo many have a failure of imagination when it comes to AI scenarios — they're constrained by mere movies (as fun as they can be), when the reality is so much more involved and engaging. The section you had about the symbolic archetypes was very fascinating! I understand that humans are drawn to irrational stories, but there are situations like this where it does not serve us well. It's also a psychological war since humans — especially in some cultures where instant gratification is pervasive — tend to be more loss-averse than thinking about what kinds of rewards they will have to gain.

What's worse is the ignorant digging of one's own hole... or another crude way to express it is finding more rope to hang oneself with in an age with so much potential. It reminds me of the findings that by some studies like GFLEC, at least 2/3 of humans are financially illiterate, yet everyone wants to comment on the economy. Now extrapolate this to those who want to talk about AI but have barely scratched the surface of free tools — let alone the premium paid ones which are much better still!

In America, there continues to be a pervasive lack of awareness about what's happening elsewhere in the world, including in China. E.g., the biggest animated film of all time BAR NONE BY A HUGE MARGIN is Ne Zha 2 (~$2.2B vs. ~$1.7B for Inside Out 2). Not something from Disney-Pixar or a Spider-Verse title. Yet many Americans have never heard of it and choose not to learn. I mention this to extrapolate to a future where creative technologists in China, Japan, South Korea, Bollywood, etc. are already using AI in abundance to further their entertainment with many many more "pairs of helping hands", versus the much more "SAY NO TO GEN AI" approach in America which is harming the games industry as well.

I generally view the unhelpful and useless AI doomerism as being complicit in holding some nations back so others will succeed. In addition to what you mentioned, China has a cohesive five-year-plan — contrast this to the ugly patchwork of state-level regulation in the USA. Really, that's such a disappointing divergence of pragmatism here!

I get that freedom of speech is a core value in America, but too many worthless words are being flung like dung — at the expense of clear actions — and it's erratically degrading the quality of humanity's progress... leading to long-term losses.

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