Don’t You Think This AI Bit’s Done Got Out of Hand?

Please forgive me if this comes across as a little hyperbolic. But it certainly seems alarming that almost every expert analyzing the impending effects of AI immersion conclusively proclaims that it’s not “if” but “when” it will eliminate most all of our jobs, and potentially, become sentient enough to deduce carbon-based life is obsolete, and attempt subjugate, if not annihilate, all of humanity in a dystopian outcome predicted in science fiction.
The amount of resignations by former AI workers and researchers over the last few years who then turn around to warn us of the impending doom of the technology is rather staggering. Just last week, a safety evaluator and product lead for Open AI named Steve Adler announced his resignation publicly by saying in part,
“Honestly I’m pretty terrified by the pace of AI development these days. When I think about where I’ll raise a future family, or how much to save for retirement, I can’t help but wonder: Will humanity even make it to that point? IMO, an AGI race is a very risky gamble, with huge downside. No lab has a solution to AI alignment today. And the faster we race, the less likely that anyone finds one in time.
Today, it seems like we’re stuck in a really bad equilibrium. Even if a lab truly wants to develop AGI responsibly, others can still cut corners to catch up, maybe disastrously. And this pushes all to speed up. I hope labs can be candid about real safety regs needed to stop this.”
We see these kinds of resignation letters on nearly a weekly basis these days. A State Department report last year warned AI could pose an “extinction level threat to humans.” Yet there seems to be no real public appetite to discuss these matters or address them in any meaningful manner, while the potential for this dystopian future seems so daunting and increasingly realistic, it makes almost every other dilemma facing society and mankind seem trivial.
It’s not like we don’t have a recent example of technology running amuck to catastrophic effects. Just a few short years ago, there was this little event called the COVID-19 pandemic that killed an estimated 7 million people, including an estimated 1.1 million Americans, before now becoming an endemic pathogen we’ll have to worry about for the rest of human time, which thanks to AI, might be more finite. By the way, it also killed songwriting legend John Prine, and 90’s country star Joe Diffie.
Many experts now believe COVID-19 was the result of a lab leak as opposed to zoonotic exposure. But again, we’re not really even discussing this type of stuff aside from scientific journals and such. We’re instead obsessed with whether the NFL refs are bias for the Kansas City Chiefs because Taylor Swift is good for ratings, or debating the severity of the January 6th riots over four years ago now. If 7 million people dead won’t stimulate a worldwide discussion and reckoning, what will?
The predictions for AI outcomes make the concerns for AI’s adoption in music seem trivial. But where music could play a role is how it might be instrumental in softly warming society to adopting AI as part of daily life.
On Friday, January 31st, Randy Travis released his second AI-assisted song called “Horses In Heaven.” Similar to Randy’s first AI assisted song, 2024’s “Where That Came From,” it is quite astounding and beautiful to hear. For those who don’t know, Travis lost his voice in a near-fatal stroke in 2013. AI is assisting in recreating his voice from previous recordings. Maybe it’s a little ironic that it’s a neotraditional country artist as opposed to an EDM one who is at the forefront of this AI voice technology.
In an ideal world, giving Randy Travis his voice back is the kind of thing AI would be perfect for. No different than a paraplegic being fitted with an artificial limb, AI could help restore what tragedy took. But then when you regard statements from former AI researchers such as Steve Adler, you wonder if it’s inadvertently part of the slippery slope slide toward dystopia, buttering us up with nostalgic feelings in a way that obfuscates our view from the existential dangers.
At the 2025 Grammy Awards on February 2nd, despite two of the members of The Beatles being deceased for many years now, the Fab Four won a Grammy Award for the AI-assisted song “Now and Then.” Though the song wasn’t AI-generated out of whole cloth, AI was used to extract John Lennon’s voice from a crude cassette tape recording for use in the song.
The Grammys have been one of the few institutions to attempt to put their foot down, and advocate for human creators over AI-generated entertainment.
“Only human creators are eligible to be submitted for consideration for, nominated for, or win a Grammy Award. A work that contains no human authorship is not eligible in any Categories,” The Grammy Awards say. However, CEO Harvey Mason Jr. has clarified, “But we’re not going to disclude or disqualify the creators working with it.”
This is what The Beatles did with “Now and Then,” which was nominated for the all-genre Record of the Year, and won for Best Rock Performance, crossing a Rubicon for AI-assisted music. Was it really the best rock performance of the last year? Of course not. It was the nostalgia factor of The Beatles, as well as the uniqueness of the recording assisted by AI that made it remarkable.
Even some of the people who stress that AI is not actually an existential threat are quick to admit that one of the other pitfalls of the technology is how it could continue to exacerbate the gulf between the have’s and the have not’s in society. As prominent music commentator and producer Rick Beato pointed out about the 2025 Grammy Awards’ rock categories, it’s a bunch of older artists. Best Rock Album nominees included The Rolling Stones (who won), The Black Crowes, Pearl Jam, and Green Day.
If by leveraging AI technology, legacy bands such as The Beatles can produce music indefinitely, and continue to win Grammy Awards for it, when will the next generation of rock musicians be afforded their own opportunities?
But again, all of these concerns and discussions seem so trivial to the impending doom so many AI scientists are warning us about, and that have been predicted in many science fiction movies. At this point, maybe this outcome is inevitable. Or maybe music, and country music specifically, can in some way play a positive role in stemming the tide, or raising awareness of the issue as one of the last organic expressions of human emotion in the popular entertainment diet that comes from human players impressing fingers on wood and wire.
There are no solutions to forward here, let alone easy ones. But it does seem like its the responsibility of all of us to address, or at least acknowledge, the much bigger impending problem.
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February 6, 2025 @ 9:31 am
Capitalism might actually save us from this lunacy when everyone realizes they’re throwing money down a hole for glorified web scrapers that simply have taken over search functions that used to work better.
February 6, 2025 @ 9:45 am
I’m not sure “capitalism will save us” is actually gonna work though. Maybe the stock market and VC class moving on to the next shiny object?
I say the above because there is seemingly zero evidence that anyone actually wants stuff like Apple Intelligence or Google Gemini shoving search results down half a page or MS Co-Pilot being shoved into their Office applications.
And the big tech companies listed above (and others) are harvesting so much data on everyone that they certainly know user uptake is nowhere near where the stock market and venture capital markets are placing AI. And yet they keep pushing all this stuff even though users seem to mostly shrug (or worse) at it’s inclusion.
February 6, 2025 @ 9:55 am
Publicly traded companies have a fiduciary responsibility to lower costs and increase profits.
Computers utilizing AI are going to be way cheaper than employing humans, and in many cases already are.
Humans are going to be optimized out of the workforce, and soon.
Pray the government cheese handouts are not moldy.
February 6, 2025 @ 1:43 pm
Mike, there are some of us like me who despise this technological invasion on humanity. My brother in law tried to sell me on the wonders of the Metaverse, and I laughed. I’ve no interest in living in some fake computer generated alternate reality. So maybe I’m one of the people your talking about. I’m deeply concerned about AI as well. I find myself asking why, knowing the risks involved, we plunge ahead doing it. The simple answer is ” because we can.” That sucks. That is in fact not a valid reason.
Now we hear that with this Chinese Deep Seek AI, they have a massive edge over the world, and now the US tech wizards are plunging into a $500 billion venture to attempt to thwart the Chinese and dominate the space. It’s literally like an arms race. And the level of spying, complete loss of privacy, and control AI will give its overlords is absurd. And no brakes on it, it’s full speed ahead.
February 6, 2025 @ 2:32 pm
Based on how much I loath the big tech companies, at this point I am cheering for Deep Seek to win. Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, etc. have all made their products increasingly worse to appease Wall Street. China would be worse, but the future these “tech bros” have envisioned for society ain’t far off in terms of dystopia.
February 6, 2025 @ 10:00 am
There is definitely a possibility that all the AI dorks are high on their own supply, and AI will not be capable of what they’re claiming it will be able to do, or that it will take much longer than they anticipate. At this point AI is simply a glorified autocomplete program that often is wrong in sometimes comical ways.
There are AI bots constantly scraping this website. And of course, I don’t get royalties or even credit for the information they’re using to answer questions, or compose text.
February 13, 2025 @ 11:56 pm
totally! seems like a big wallstreet pump and dump this ai scam. AI is just a glorified web search!
February 6, 2025 @ 9:42 am
it’s honestly a GREAT song. I playlisted it but you can tell that is a robot doing an imitation of Randy’s voice. no one and no thing will ever sound like him. I wish labels/artists would stop using AI. again, I love the song, but, it just does not sound authentic to a seasoned fan.
February 6, 2025 @ 10:03 am
I think that the way Randy Travis and his team has approached these songs has been very careful and tasteful, and the results have been excellent. And since Travis is impaired (and got screwed over by his manager/ex-wife), I am much more forgiving of this situation. But I would also be lying if I said I wasn’t conflicted about the whole thing. As CJ Ellis said below, the fact that Randy is still around to sign off on this also makes a big difference.
February 6, 2025 @ 10:16 am
majorly. Just told the same thing to my mom on the phone. good writeup trig.
February 6, 2025 @ 12:06 pm
Randy is being manipulated by his current wife, as well.
She is in for a buck, and has found ways to milk his fame, any way she can.
She got the shaft when Randy had his stroke.
After leaving her husband for Randy, and that not working out as she planned, she is driven to get her $ off of him.
Mary is a blue flamer.
February 6, 2025 @ 12:20 pm
Oh yeah? Is that why Mary took her “in sickness and in health” vows AFTER Randy had his stroke, when he was fighting for liquidity from all the medical bills and still owing his label money, all while Randy was still being sued by his ex-wife?
“Mary is a blue flamer.”
It’s adorable that you think you know what that means.
More pearls of wisdom from Di Harris.
February 6, 2025 @ 1:23 pm
Randy was being sued by Lib Hatcher??
If he she took his money and left him in the poor house, as he has implied, then shouldn’t HE be suing HER?
At least it shoud be going both ways with claims and counterclaims.
I don’t know what went on between those two people and would not hazard a guess.
February 6, 2025 @ 1:39 pm
Anyone interested in learning more about what happened with Randy Travis can read, watch, or listen to the Country History X episode about it that I published in 2021. It tells the FULL story, and it’s pretty crazy.
https://savingcountrymusic.com/randy-travis-versus-lib-hatcher-country-history-x-9/
February 6, 2025 @ 2:23 pm
“Mary is a blue flamer.”
“It’s adorable that you think you know what that means.”
: D Cute.
Let’s hear what you think it means.
Let’s see how far off, or spot on, you are.
February 6, 2025 @ 11:57 am
It’s actually Jason Dupré singing through an AI processor that makes him sound like Randy Travis rather than a completely synthetic voice.
February 10, 2025 @ 4:32 pm
No. It’s not.
February 10, 2025 @ 4:46 pm
You’re right, the dude’s name is James. The reast is accurate, though.
https://www.michigansthumb.com/news/article/randy-travis-ai-song-horses-in-heaven-20149324.php
February 6, 2025 @ 9:51 am
Ive said it for many years about the stuff in terminator and other movies. You have visual proof that thos stuff can and probably happen but our leaders and people under them blindly go on with advanced robotics and AI and disregard the proof of possible doom in front of their eyes. Sure they are movies but you can find lots of truth in movies like these. Self driving cars, bots that can do anything a person can, its an obvious slip down for a bad fall but yet we go on anyway.
February 6, 2025 @ 10:07 am
If humanity ends up in a battle with machines, we’ll look back at the reams and reams of warnings we had about what we were getting into. At this point, there are more people warning about the future of all of this than those telling us about the benefits to humanity. Even advocates are admitting now “There’s no stopping this,” and all we can do is attempt to solve the downstream effects like massive unemployment, dramatically increased inequality, and the subjugation of the human race to technology—not exactly reassuring conversations to have.
February 6, 2025 @ 2:30 pm
I agree. Remember the robot guard dogs around trump, they have robots out on the battlefield now, not the drones but actual fighting robots. When you hear about what goes wrong with the driverless cars, plenty more possibilities of death n destruction with the dogs and weaponized robots. Plus then you bring in the moral delimmas or lack of when it comes to things like this. The old saying applied, we spent so much time figuring out we could do something, not enough time was spent deciding if we should. A little funny note or really not funny. Our neighborhood is right by a storage rental station. Well they out out this security thing. Its on wheels, its not a robot but it acts like one. It detects motion even on our culdesac and when i walk out there going to work at 4 am it makes sure to tell me its monitoring the area. Prob a sign of the future.
February 7, 2025 @ 1:44 pm
The smartphones owns us already.
I see those zombies dragging unsteady around, their stare fixed at the tiny screen, the earbuds effectively keeping any warning shouts at bay.
February 6, 2025 @ 11:03 am
Birth rates are plummeting in developed nations. We are fast approaching a time where the old people that need to be cared for will for outnumber the younger people who can take care of them. Also as AI and technology continues to take lower level jobs from people there will be an ever increasing number of people that cannot be employed which will force the issue of universal basic income. I understand that argument but there is a whole host of problems with that. If AI is making the decisions and half the nation is like the adult tigers in Tiger King that are not-profitable and are simply consuming resources, the only financially sensible option is for those gunshots to go off at 2am to save resources for those profitable baby tigers.
February 8, 2025 @ 9:44 am
I urge everyone to watch “2001: A Space Odyssey” again. It depicts our present. iPads, flat screens, Zoom calls, viruses, and a computer meant to assist that instead kills. Kubrick and Clarke figured it out in 1968.
February 6, 2025 @ 9:59 am
The only way I will find the use of AI somewhat acceptable for music is if the artist who is being impersonated is still alive and is able to personally be a part of the process. In Randy Travis’s case, which is an incredibly unique one, I’d say that holds up for the most part. But the obvious usage is to “resurrect” a voice of someone who is gone, not someone alive who can no longer sing, like Travis. The slippery slope is real and concerning.
February 6, 2025 @ 10:44 am
This is the key. It has to come from the artist him/herself. What we don’t need are managers/family members/licensing companies making new music from deceased artists as a money grab.
February 6, 2025 @ 10:24 am
As long as I can hear Randy’s voice again, all is good with the world, and i’m definitely in favor of it!
February 6, 2025 @ 7:37 pm
Now that the voice pattern is made, it would take only a few minor tweaks and you could have Randy Travis singing every song that was ever recorded.
And you could have him call you on the phone and ask for $100 to be sent in bitcoin.
And his voice and image could be supporting every foul thing you ever stood against.
Admittedly, its still not that good and needs a similar sounding vocalist to get phrasing and such, but could be close.
Anyway, so are you still in favour of it? Or just in favour of a pleasant byproduct?
February 6, 2025 @ 10:57 pm
That is how this starts. People justify it for some cheap pleasure.
February 6, 2025 @ 10:54 am
Rick Beato’s channel is outstanding. I like his take on AI and popular music. Highly recommended to any music lover.
February 6, 2025 @ 10:55 am
I don’t believe for a moment that Randy Travis truly behind that AI song. I believe his handlers forced it on him like a social media post where grandkids forced their demented grandparent to hold a sign saying “Can I get 1000 likes for my birthday?”
I see my parents watching Youtube videos on their TV that are narrated by AI – and they don’t know that it is. Also try telling a Taylor Swift fan that all her vocal tracks are heavily edited to the point where it’s not her voice. Just watch her Tiny Desk performance to see the difference.
I’m fed up with the smoke and mirrors of technology to the point where I am ready to give up all the funny Reels on instagram.
February 7, 2025 @ 1:38 pm
I’m sure that Taylor Swift herself is purely AI by now.
It’s come a long way since Cats.
February 6, 2025 @ 10:57 am
I don’t mind the use of AI on the Beatle track because the material existed and AI was just used to enhance it so that a playable song could be made for it. It’s nothing that hasn’t been done before, the technology is just better.
I do have some issues with the Randy Travis cut, though, because it was fully AI-created. I can give this specific song a little slack because Randy is still around and it might make him feel good for him to hear his voice on a new recording, but I don’t see how we as a community can get behind something like this, which is basically a vocal processor that makes everybody’s voice sound like Randy’s, while we rail about other forms of vocal processing, computer-generated drum tracks, and the like.
February 6, 2025 @ 11:00 pm
People are OK with this because they like Randy Travis.
The emotions are overriding common sense.
February 7, 2025 @ 1:34 pm
I traded my wife through 20 years for an inflateable doll recently.
The sex became so much better.
February 6, 2025 @ 11:43 am
“This business will get out of control. It will get out of control and we’ll be lucky to live through it.”
-Admiral Josh Painter, “The Hunt for Red October”
February 6, 2025 @ 11:48 am
Honestly I don’t have much of a problem with Randy’s situation. It gives him a chance to still do what he loves. And it doesn’t sound any worse than a lot of the bad auto-tuned songs of the last 10 years. I haven’t been able to find yet if Randy wrote the sing. That would just be icing on the cake.
February 6, 2025 @ 12:07 pm
The song was written by Jon Randall and Matt Nolen. I said this with the first AI Randy Travis song. I do agree that if he actually writes, or co-writes the song, it makes a big difference. And from what I understand, even though Travis is non verbal, he’s 100% lucid and understanding of everything going on, and can/does communicate through writing and other means.
February 6, 2025 @ 12:28 pm
Randy had written so many of his early hits, I’ve really been hoping he would start writing again. He has such an incredible story of perseverance to tell. I know his family says his mind is still 100% but it makes you wonder.
February 6, 2025 @ 1:19 pm
Randy was never a prolific writer, he only co-wrote a few of his own songs and one that Alan Jackson recorded.
February 6, 2025 @ 12:20 pm
He didn’t write it. He didn’t contribute vocals to the song. I am not dumb enough to think that a 1980’s Country artist who went thru decades of alcohol abuse and health issues later in life, would give a rat’s ass about this AI song.
February 6, 2025 @ 11:48 am
I asked Chatgpt about the problem of AI in country music in 15 words.
“AI in country music risks losing authenticity, storytelling depth, and emotional connection with audiences.”
So it seems AI understands the problem No need to worry…
February 6, 2025 @ 12:24 pm
AI tools are mostly sociopathic. The ones that aren’t provide cover for those that are.
February 6, 2025 @ 1:13 pm
Excelente artículo, Trigg. Qué bueno que insistas sobre este tema tan nebuloso.
Estos eventos me producen escalofríos, no lo niego; y entiendo que hay que reflexionar y actuar sobre ellos, sino colectiva, al menos individualmente. Por lo pronto, insisto en la idea de que este tipo de producciones adviertan explicitamente que fueron elaboradas a partir de maniobras de IA. Solo eso… de modo que podamos decidir si evitarlas, o consumirlas advertidos de su naturaleza artificial.
Esta canción que reza ser de Randy Travis es morbosa, desde ya; me pareció ingeniosa, la IA hace una imitación realmente sorprendente de las inflexiones, las texturas tímbricas y emocionales de la voz humana.
Ya sabiendo su origen, me mantuve distanciado emocionalmente. Admito que es defensivo, pero no puedo con esto, lo considero cualitativamente inferior a una producción no contaminada por la IA.
February 6, 2025 @ 1:43 pm
There are already a whole lot of AI generated albums out on the different streaming platforms. Thusfar it’s been relatively easy to distinguish them from the real deal,but some of them are already coming pretty darn close to it.
February 6, 2025 @ 4:25 pm
I don’t think Hank done it this way.
February 7, 2025 @ 8:46 am
He will, on the record that’s due for release in May.
Hank Williams; The Jay-Z Songbook, vol. 1.
A sure winner at the Grammy’s next year.
February 6, 2025 @ 4:46 pm
I definitely agree with Trig that alot the people touting this are drinking their own kool aid, and much of it as just the next big text marketing hype.
One this the general public doesn’t seem to get is the difference between AI and AGI. It’s the same as autocorrect/chatGPT vs self-driving cars/Terminators. We’re along way from AGI, if it’s even achievable.
Certainly jobs have and will be lost to AI. Who knows how the music community will evolve (Beato has a great take on this) and god know art is already suffering (see internet AI slop). I don’t have any real answers or insight, but I know DeepSeek isn’t going to “become aware” and pull the nuke codes on us.
February 6, 2025 @ 4:56 pm
Great song. Reminds me of Three Wooden Crosses.
February 6, 2025 @ 6:25 pm
Mr Travis new song sounds more like him then first a i take I for work enjoy this one much better
February 6, 2025 @ 6:47 pm
Man, I don’t think I’ve ever agreed with the entire comment section on this website over a non-music related issue!
February 6, 2025 @ 8:05 pm
It seems that the shell of Bob Wayne is rejoicing in all of the available AI tech. Not surprising that his art and videos have become low effort if you’ve heard any of his releases since the Century deal.
February 7, 2025 @ 5:55 am
I was recently introduced to the ask button on Youtube by a fellow songwriter and after looking over its summary’s of my songs I was shocked at how accurate the AI descriptions were. It was able to accurately establish the narrative arch within’ each song better than most critics and my more obscure references were fleshed out in a concise manner that, honestly were quite shocking. It’s a small fish in an extremely large ocean, but one that really got me wondering about the future of songwriters and humanity in general.
February 7, 2025 @ 6:56 am
Using AI to recreate a deceased – or otherwise incapacitated – artist’s voice is something the music industry should not be doing for a couple of reasons. First, it cheapens the catalogue of songs the artist actually recorded. We value artistic output because of scarcity. Take Hank Sr., who died at the ripe old age of 29; we treasure each of his recordings precisely because there won’t be more of them.
Second, AI-recorded music may take opportunities from other artists. If the song is a good one, as is the case with what Randy Travis just released, why can’t somebody else release it? This isn’t a huge deal for older artists, who aren’t going to chart or sell that much anyway, but imagine the implications if someone like Justin Bieber or Taylor Swift got involved in releasing AI-boosted recordings. Heck, we could have them charting new singles in 200 years!
To conclude, the past should be left in the past. We should cherish each great song and artist for what they contribute and mourn when they’re gone.
February 7, 2025 @ 8:05 am
I agree with every bit of your assessment. In this case, there’s absolutely nothing wrong with co-writer Matt Nolen’s original recording of the song.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AmwHIs7TIEI&ab_channel=CaseyNolen
Sure, he’s no Randy Travis, but so what? Throughout history, in all forms of art, there have been the all-time greats, the greats for their time, the very goods, the goods, and the good enoughs, and who fits into what category is often subject to the personal preference of the listener/viewer. If we eliminate everyone but the all-time greats and artificially apply the talents of the all-time greats to every new piece of art, then for all intents and purposes art will cease to exist as a relevant part of humanity.
February 7, 2025 @ 8:01 am
Here’s where this is heading. A lot of modern music is bad. It’s every genre. Pretty soon the majority of people will figure out how to take their favorite artists, living or dead, and use AI to create new custom songs. Hell, people will start writing their own lyrics and have their favorite singer sing them their own songs. It’s already happening but on a small scale for now. If this hurts the Jay Z’s and the scumbags making millions of dollars I don’t really care.
If it destroys the music industry as we know it then power on because this will be the atomic bomb dropped on them.
Meanwhile, people that crave real music from actual musicians will continue to support live music and real music.
But as far as the corrupt, bloated and generic mass marketed shitshow goes… let it burn. They may try to monetize this but I don’t think they can control it. Definitely going to be interesting to watch this play out.
February 7, 2025 @ 10:18 am
If I had heard the Randy Travis song on the radio, had I not known he was unable to talk I don’t think I would have known it is AI. I don’t really understand the whole AI thing but I do find it frightening.
February 8, 2025 @ 10:02 am
Sharon Osbourne’s pushing for another Black Sabbath reunion. It’s known Ozzy has Parkinson’s and can barely walk, and the last song I heard from him was definitely AI singing. Do people really want to see Ozzy reduced to giving AI prompts on stage? Aerosmith is possibly reconvening, too, even though Steven Tyler hasn’t had anywhere near the time to fully heal from his voice box injury, if recovery is even possible. Tyler’s legacy will be forever sullied in my eyes if he mimes to AI.
Tonight I’ll see Jonathan and Abigail Peyton, real singers who will do their thing live, right before my eyes. Can’t wait!
February 10, 2025 @ 9:08 am
i personally like that randy is releasing new music, but my question is would people rather here his late 80s / early 90s voice or his later career voice just before his stroke?
February 10, 2025 @ 4:39 pm
I’m looking forward to new AI created albums by Hank Sr., Waylon, Haggard, Jones, etc.🙄 Where does it end?
Randy’s handlers are very quiet about these AI songs, instead releasing them without informing people it’s not actually Randy singing. A lot of music fans don’t know about Randy’s health issues. Check out his social media pages, people think this is real, and that Randy is on tour singing.
February 12, 2025 @ 1:09 pm
The IG account “There I Ruined It” shows how awful the future can be for music:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MAFdzBTe2lg&ab_channel=MerasmusEntertainment
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4Qg99MhZQM&ab_channel=ThereIRuinedIt
And so on…
February 13, 2025 @ 11:02 am
I dislike the Randy Travis creation as much as the next guy, but I frankly think that so much of the doomsday fears of AI are metaphysical errors, born of a time when we are de facto materialists. If one thinks the mind is reducible to matter, then sure, we are in trouble, but there’s no scientific evidence for that. https://thecritic.co.uk/ai-is-far-older-than-we-think/