What percentage of these great works have been downed out by the noise, never given serious attention, and been lost to time? Because that percentage is about to go way up.
Enough loud noise for long enough and I don't even hear it. Millennials never fell for the bs our parents and grandparents did online - we saw thru that shit as children and became the resident experts for all things tech bc of it.
I was the oldest millennial in my extended family that lived nearby, so I setup all my older family members internet - account, router & wifi, emails and FBs before I went to college. I'll bet some of those passwords are the same.
Gen Alpha should be able to be similar to that with us Millennials and AI - they will grow up with it, learn it, they will think about AI in prompts - not have to create prompts out of what they want (that's tough to explain) They will learn how to interact with AI as a friendly tool and won't have our hangups - specifically the ones regarding if they are awake or not, Gen Alpha will not care.
They will totally embrace AI without concern of privacy or the Terminator. Considering AI is about a toddler level the two will likely compete in many ways - the AI to show the ads and the kids to circumvent them as a basic example.
tldr: I think Gen Alpha ought to be able to just see AI content - there will be tells and those kids will kno them. So human content online especially the good stuff, but really all the many niches of it, should be all right in the future - even if good AI content is everywhere.
Wow, I rewrote this twice, sorry for the book - you mentioned something I've been thinking about recently and I obviously had way too much to say.
>They will totally embrace AI without concern of privacy or the Terminator.
Exactly, which is why SkyNet won't send the terminators after us for a few decades, when Gen Alpha has forgotten about the movies and decided to trust the machines.
I was the oldest millennial in my extended family that lived nearby, so I setup all my older family members internet - account, router & wifi, emails and FBs before I went to college. I'll bet some of those passwords are the same.
Gen Alpha should be able to be similar to that with us Millennials and AI - they will grow up with it, learn it, they will think about AI in prompts - not have to create prompts out of what they want (that's tough to explain) They will learn how to interact with AI as a friendly tool and won't have our hangups - specifically the ones regarding if they are awake or not, Gen Alpha will not care.
They will totally embrace AI without concern of privacy or the Terminator. Considering AI is about a toddler level the two will likely compete in many ways - the AI to show the ads and the kids to circumvent them as a basic example.
tldr: I think Gen Alpha ought to be able to just see AI content - there will be tells and those kids will kno them. So human content online especially the good stuff, but really all the many niches of it, should be all right in the future - even if good AI content is everywhere.
Wow, I rewrote this twice, sorry for the book - you mentioned something I've been thinking about recently and I obviously had way too much to say.