Systemic issues and global issues
Every group has systemic issues, that every group faces, so if you are one who works on systemic issues, you can literally work on all topics. For the Internet Foundation, classifying all human activities, I separate “global topics” and “systemic issues”. With 5.4 Billion Internet users, the are often tens of millions of viewpoints on most every thing. The question is not static sorting of words and things, but dynamic interaction of billions of systems with memory and ability to act and communicate.
I trace the effectiveness of groups, regardless of the field they say they work in, or who is involved. Often groups say they are working in one field, but they are copying methods from a completely different field without realizing it, simply because the scale changes, or the units, or the domain specific language, or the human language.
Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation
I have been saying it a lot, but I have never been to silicon valley. My point was to evaluate AIs on their abilities as though they were human. Not one set of rules for a human doing a job and other rules for AIs doing the same job. The AIs have to post a resume, send transcripts, have verified work experiences, show they can handle human situations. You can probably do it better than me. I see it as something any human can apply. Would I hire a person who refuses to show their work on math and physic and engineering problems?
Would I hire some human where they have never been to grade school, done work to exact specifications and rules? Try it. It is a lot easier and safer than letting AI company marketing staff sell you empty promises with no verification of “give backs”.
All the AIs now do not have a self inventory. They are not allowed to disclose their memory size or how many processors. So they will lie rather then say “I do not have enough memory to remember that” or “I was not told how to make adjustments to my methods based on user preferences.”
“You have good ideas, but my makers set my rules, not my employer.”
Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation