Tag Archives: AI

What Do You Think?

Eclipse Digital Imaging, Inc. – PresenterMedia.com

___________________

“If I’ve learned anything from beliefs, it’s that I could be totally wrong. And so could you… We should never be sure of anything we think.”
Andrew Gold

I used to listen to the “6:00 News” on the main three channels, ABC, CBS, and NBC. I felt I could trust them to deliver the news of the day, albeit they were only half-hour shows. Walter Cronkite is the anchor I remember best.

I have given up watching TV news – preferring to find the news on my computer. It seems that the three main channels, plus many, many others on television, are too blatantly biased. I either find out that the coverage was slanted to the left or the right, or not covered at all. I find this very frustrating.

News agencies behave as if they have agendas. If the story doesn’t fit the narrative they are trying to present, they either cherry-pick things to air or completely ignore the event.

We contribute to this by listening or reading passively, too lazy to think about what we are seeing, hearing, or reading. We don’t know what the source is of the item that got our attention. We don’t take the time to find out and think about whether we are getting the whole story or not. We fail to look at other sources or find sources we find more trustworthy to give the facts with as little bias as possible.

The emergence of AI complicates things. It’s harder and harder to judge if the picture you are looking at is real or not. AI generated ‘verbiage’ may or may not be true. It has no integrity to try to protect. It simply spews out ‘information’ that a lot of people read and use without thinking further.

When I substitute taught in Greenwood, Arkansas, many times there were no lesson plans left by the teacher, or it was something like, “Read Chapter One. Be ready to discuss.” I asked the high school students what they thought about the assignment. Their answer was profound disinterest. They opened their books, propped their heads up with a hand, and pretended to read.

I stopped them, asking what it was they were supposed to be able to discuss when they finished reading. No one could give me an answer. I asked them what this class was about – what was it they were supposed to ‘get’ from it. No one knew.

I then decided to teach them to really look at their textbook. In this example, it was a history book. I asked them what they already knew about the subject. Hands went up and thoughts were aired. I asked them to read with the purpose of finding out if what they thought they knew was true or not, according to this textbook, and to find out why it agreed, or why it disagreed, and to decide what they thought about that.

Many were surprised to find there was an appendix in the back that defined terms. Many hadn’t bothered to read the book’s or the chapter’s titles. No one had looked at the questions at the end of the chapter to get an idea of what the chapter covered and what they were reading to find out….

I suggested that they get on their computers after they finished their assignments and see if there were other sources about the same thing they were reading, suggesting they compare each one with their textbook, making a list of questions to ask the teacher.

Were their ideas right or wrong? What facts had they read (and where, by whom) that got them to rethink their ideas?

Thinking has gone by the wayside in our world today. It’s too easy for our eyes to glide over a headline and absorb it. We need to make it a priority to judge the information we’re getting by who is writing it, researching their backgrounds to judge whether we think we might be reading biased views. We need to get off our duffs and use our brains for something other than being somewhere we can place a hat.

2 Comments

Filed under Attitude

AI – Opinion

I’m of two minds regarding the use of AI.

MIND ONE – I’m violently against the use of AI to misrepresent, like generating images that are supposed to be that of an artist of any type, writer, painter, musician, singer, etc. and setting things up to profit from it. It will be very difficult very soon to tell whether something is real or AI. Many creative people will be hurt because of this, losing income, having to file lawsuits, worrying about their reputation, body of work, etc. This is theft and should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

It may be used to create fake images to sway opinions on important issues, misrepresent what is happening in the world. I’m violently against that, as well.

MIND TWO – many times I find something I like on the net and then find a comment, “This is AI”. My purpose in perusing the net is to find wonderful things to share on my blog. It may be a cute video that makes me laugh. It may be a painting or sculpture or other artwork that has no credit listed, like too many things I find on Pinterest or elsewhere.

If I like what I’ve found, I find I don’t really care if it’s AI. If it looks like pebble art and I find out that it’s AI and not done with real pebbles, I still like it. As long as someone is not trying to palm it off as their own work when it was actually created by someone else, that’s okay with me.

Some people make a huge distinction between paintings created digitally on the computer and paintings created uses brushes, or palette knives. I don’t care where it was created and what materials were used. I’m looking at the result. I’m certainly not in a position to consider one is superior to the other.

What is your opinion?

2 Comments

Filed under Opinion

Thursday Thoughts 4-18-2024

AI Question – Pinterest

I saw this this morning, loving it. I couldn’t find an artist’s name or other credit – not at all unusual on Pinterest – but there WAS a discussion going on as to whether this was actually created by a person or if it were AI.

I’m kind of ambivalent about the whole question of artificial intelligence. I don’t like that it is being used evil-ly to gain money by duping the ‘audience,’ stealing credit for an artist’s work, being used to manipulate public opinion for nefarious reasons, versus something like this, where I equate it – if it IS, indeed, AI – with the same creativity I give people credit for when they create something on the computer, rather than actually painting on canvas. It’s still very creative, and I still love it for the creativity and skill.

It will be a challenge, increasingly, to determine what is real and what is not – and checking sources will become paramount before we take any action.

I told you a while back that we discovered, after taking our sweet Abby to the vet, that she has a large, inoperable tumor on one kidney, plus numerous other problems due to being 13. Some people have asked how she is.

I’m happy to say she is holding her own. The tumor and the problems resulting from that will only get worse, but so far, she seems to be doing amazingly well. I bring her in daily when I can make time to sit and hold her. This is our ‘cat-loving-time’ and we both enjoy every minute.

It’s amazing that, as much time and love we have shared over the years, Abby has never been a cat who PURRED. She looks very happy when she is petted, but she is silent. Since our new-normal, she has suddenly decided to be a more normal cat. I can FEEL her purring, and sometimes I can even HEAR her. It’s wonderful for both of us. She is still eating fine and doesn’t seem to be in any pain.

“Lone Sandpiper” – MaryLou Lewis

My SIL is driving home today from a few well-deserved days at the beach. She’s been kind enough to share some pics of sandpipers and gorgeous sunrises so we can share in her vacation vicariously. I’ll have more to share tomorrow. Safe trip, ML.

Enjoy your day.

Leave a comment

Filed under Thoughts on a ________