Schadtechnologiesanierung

Beim KI-Einsatz für unternehmenskritische Prozesse drohen nicht nur unüberschaubare Nutzungsentgelte, sondern auch andere Folgekosten:

Suspect a large part of the future will be AIsbestos Removal.

Asbestos was a wonder material which was going to revolutionise the world. Only then we discovered just how carcinogenic it was.

And now, every day, we have to gently unpick it from the urban environment.

How many companies will belatedly discover that a load-bearing process is actually riddled with AI? Then they’ll have to pay to carefully remove it without any further environmental damage.

Hence AIsbestos.

Weil außerdem immer mehr Kundinnen eine AI-Allergie entwickeln, haben sich weitsichtige Unternehmen bereits gegen diese Kosten entschieden:

Perhaps her elation at finding harbor on an AI-battered internet shouldn’t be surprising: As AI-generated content has proliferated online, so have concerns about the technology’s quality, ethics, and safety. Generative-AI services are still prone to “hallucinate” and deliver false and unreliable information, they can be used to produce scams and misinformation, and they were trained on the work of nonconsenting creatives, the majority of whom have received no compensation. As such, a steady tick of companies, brands, and creative workers have taken to explicitly advertising their products and services as human-made. It’s a bit like the organic-food labels that rose to prominence years ago, but for digital labor. Certified 100 percent AI-free.

Writers and media outlets are slapping disclaimers and No AI declarations on blogs and websites ; an organization called Not by AI offers a downloadable badge that anyone can use (it claims that 264,000 webpages currently do so). A classical radio station in Omaha issued a No AI pledge, and the Perth Comic Arts Festival put out a statement banning AI-generated media from its event. Hashtags such as #noai, #notai, and #noaiart are deployed by users on Instagram—a modern take on the #nofilter trend that suggested that an image was presented without digital enhancements. The tech-journalism outlet 404 Media describes itself as AI free: Media for humans, by humans. In a digital ecosystem overwhelmingly controlled by monopolistic tech companies such as Google and Meta, each of which is bent on deploying new AI products whether users want them or not , even these small declarations are ways to register a protest, signal discontent, and wave the flag for other AI skeptics to rally around.