This. The more I read about it the more disturbing it becomes. I am trying to roll with the punches and adapt. I am sure there are numerous benefits to many fields of study but still...I suspect the biggest danger is going to be in the way humans react to the technology.
Not in the way people think. Companies are already trying to figure out how to use AI to replace writers, whether it be for entertainment or business writing. As AI improves, companies will try to figure out how to use AI to replace other jobs. The problem is that AI is not automation. It's simply replicating content that is fed to it. Sometimes it's good, sometimes it's bad. It will always need checks by humans. Will businesses realize this? Who knows. But with the writer's strike, I don't doubt we'll be seeing AI generated content on our streaming services soon enough.
(I'm a writer, so I have a lot of Thoughts about AI.)
It would seem the only way is for every student to be expected to be able to defend their work conversationally in a respectful space. There would need to be strict controls to prevent kids from being bullied for alternative points of view or for when a kid is way smarter than they look like they should be, this is totally me, I present as pure dingbat but am not. If a kid actually created the work that child should be able to articulate what they think to an impartial 3rd party, maybe volunteer sets of parents could help schools or local college students could get extra credit with this. There are resources, we need to be creative to adapt as quickly as the world changes.I worry about the effects of AI in academia. Any course that uses written work for evaluation will be compromised. How do I know that the submitted papers, lab reports, etc., are original work and reflect the students' knowledge and understanding- or is it all AI generated?