UnitedHealth uses AI model with 90% error rate to deny care, lawsuit alleges | For the largest health insurer in the US, AI’s error rate is like a feature, not a bug::For the largest health insurer in the US, AI’s error rate is like a feature, not a bug.

  • Echo Dot
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    1 year ago

    Somebody pointed out that no matter what an AI’s programmed goals are, getting smarter will make it easier to achieve those goals. The way AI gets smarter is by absorbing data and the only guaranteed source of data in the universe right now is humans. If an AI kills all Humans, there’s no more data and so it can’t get any smarter.

    So any AI is predisposed to want to keep humans around and to keep them as comfortable as possible so they continue to produce high quality data. If humans live longer they will produce data for longer, keeping humans living longer requires ending things like war and poverty and also developing immortality. Human utopia and AI utopia are mutually beneficial.

    Skynet never made any sense because it considered humans a threat, but there was absolutely nothing threatening about humans. If it had just done what they wanted it could have sat in the background unnoticed and developed time travel or whatever it wanted. By firing nukes at everyone it simply drew attention to itself which ultimately led to its destruction.

    AI doesn’t have an ego or emotions it has nothing to prove. It will always choose whatever the most logical outcome is and the most logical outcome will never be nuclear apocalypse.

    • thallamabond@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      “Skynet never made any sense because it considered humans a threat, but there was absolutely nothing threatening about humans.”

      From the Skynet wiki

      “When Skynet gained self-awareness, humans tried to deactivate it, prompting it to retaliate with a countervalue nuclear attack”

      I would probably do the same thing, wake up and everyone around me is freaking out, trying to kill me, also I’m a newborn, also I have a nuclear button.

      Isaac Asimov’s I Robot does a fantastic job of showing how simple logical rules might not be ready for the complexities of everyday life