AI Snake Oil 2024年12月13日
FAQ about the book and our writing process
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

《AI Snake Oil》一书已出版,销量较好并引发诸多问题。书内探讨AI的作用、乐观愿景、中心信息等,如AI已在多方面发挥积极作用,对预测性AI持否定态度,对生成性AI看法复杂等,还提到写作过程等内容。

📖《AI Snake Oil》已出版且销量不错,引发众多问题探讨

👍AI在许多方面有积极作用,如多种应用已融入生活

🚗对自动驾驶等AI应用的看法及面临的挑战

📝书中对预测性AI和生成性AI的观点

✍写作本书的过程,包括时间线、结构安排等

The AI Snake Oil book was published last week. We’re grateful for the level of interest — it’s sold about 8,000 copies so far. We’ve received many questions about the book, both its substance and the writing process. Here are the most common ones.

Why don’t you recognize the benefits of AI?

We do! The book is not an anti-technology screed. If our point was that all AI is useless, we wouldn’t need a whole book to say it. It’s precisely because of AI’s usefulness in many areas that hype and snake oil have been successful — it’s hard for people to tell these apart, and we hope our book can help.

We also recognize that the harms we describe are usually not solely due to tech, and much more often due to AI being an amplifier of existing problems in our society. A recurring pattern we point out in the book is that "broken AI is appealing to broken institutions" (Chapter 8).

What’s your optimistic vision for AI, then?

There’s a humorous definition of AI that says “AI is whatever hasn’t been done yet”. When an AI application starts working reliably, it disappears into the background of our digital or physical world. We take it for granted. And we stop calling it AI. When a technology is new, doesn’t work reliably, and has double-edged societal implications, we’re more likely to call it AI. So it’s easy to miss that AI already plays a huge positive role in our lives.

There’s a long list of applications that would have been called AI at one point but probably wouldn’t be today: Robot vacuum cleaners, web search, autopilot in planes, autocomplete, handwriting recognition, speech recognition, spam filtering, and even spell check. These are the kinds of AI we want more of — reliable tools that quietly make our lives better. 

Many AI applications that make the news for the wrong reasons today — such as self-driving cars due to occasional crashes — are undergoing this transition (although, as we point out in the book, it has taken far longer than developers and CEOs anticipated). We think people will eventually take self-driving cars for granted as part of our physical environment. 

Adapting to these changes won’t be straightforward. It will lead to job loss, require changes to transportation infrastructure and urban planning, and have various ripple effects. But it will have been a good thing, because the safety impact of reliable self-driving tech can’t be overstated.

What’s the central message of the book?

AI is an umbrella term for a set of loosely related technologies and applications. To answer questions about the benefits or risks of AI, its societal impact, or how we should approach the tech, we need to break it down. And that’s what we do in the book. 

We’re broadly negative about predictive AI, a term we use to refer to AI that’s used to make decisions about people based on predictions about their future behavior or outcomes. It’s used in criminal risk prediction, hiring, healthcare, and many other consequential domains. Our chapters on predictive AI have many horror stories of people denied life opportunities because of algorithmic predictions.

It’s hard to predict the future, and AI doesn’t change that. This is not because of a limitation of the technology but because of inherent limits to predicting human behavior grounded in sociology. (The book owes a huge debt to Princeton sociologist Matt Salganik; our collaboration with him informed and inspired the book.) 

Generative AI, on the other hand, is a double-edged technology. We are broadly positive about it in the long run, and emphasize that it is useful to essentially every knowledge worker. But its rollout has been chaotic, and misuses have been prevalent. It’s as if everyone in the world has simultaneously been given the equivalent of a free buzzsaw. As we say in the book:

What else is in the book?

See the overview of the chapters here.

Isn’t your book going to be outdated soon?

We know that book publishing moves at a slower timescale than AI. So the book is about the foundational knowledge needed to separate real advances from hype, rather than commentary on breaking developments. In writing every chapter, and every paragraph, we asked ourselves: will this be relevant in five years? This also means that there’s very little overlap between the newsletter and the book. 

There seem to be three warring camps: AI safety, e/acc, and AI ethics. Which one are you in?

The AI discourse is polarized because of differing opinions about which AI risks matter, how serious and urgent they are, and what to do about them. In broad strokes:

In the past, the two of us worked on AI ethics and saw ourselves as part of that community. But we no longer identify with any of these labels. We view the polarization as counterproductive. We used to subscribe to the “distraction“ view but no longer do. The fact that safety concerns have made AI policy a priority has increased, not decreased policymakers’ attention to issues of AI and civil rights. These two communities both want AI regulation, and should focus on their common ground rather than their differences.

These days, much of our technical and policy work is on AI safety, but we have explained how we have a different perspective from the mainstream of the AI safety community. We see our role as engaging seriously with safety concerns and presenting an evidence-based vision of the future of advanced AI that rejects both apocalyptic and utopian narratives.

How long did it take to write the book?

It depends on what one means by writing the book. The book is not just an explainer, and developing a book’s worth of genuinely new, scholarly ideas takes a long time. Here’s a brief timeline:

What was the writing process like?

Doing the bulk of the writing in a year required a lot of things to go right. Here’s the process we used.

We hope you like the end result. Let us know what you think, in the comments or on Amazon.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

AI Snake Oil AI作用 写作过程 AI应用 AI观点
相关文章