We have to start wrestling with what it will be like when AI is ubiquitous and omnipresent.
Think about that for a second. I’ve been using Google Drive in various ways for more than a decade, personally and professionally. It’s not my primary platform, but I’ve spent plenty of time there and have produced, shared and received countless documents over the years. Do I know everything that’s in there? Absolutely not. Will ChatGPT? 100%.
For Sam Altman’s vision of AI as a “life advisor” to come true, ChatGPT’s tentacles will need to extend into every corner of your life. First Google Drive, then GMAIL, then all of your many, many accounts, facilitated by the potential new “Sign in with ChatGPT” functionality.
It goes beyond the exam room. When OpenAI purchased Jony Ives’ AI hardware company a couple weeks ago, they said the goal is to create devices that capture all aspects of our lives so the AI can benefit us in new and more powerful ways.
Knowing Ives’ design aesthetic, whatever they’re working on will be beautiful, sleek, and subtle. In other words, you may not know someone is wearing one. Maybe it’s a pendant attached to a lapel. Or a pair of glasses where you have to look really closely to notice the tiny red blinking light telling you you’re being recorded.
What does this “always on” world look like? How do we consent to having interactions recorded? Can we forcibly stop someone from recording interactions with us? What about all the sticky parts of life that we don’t want an AI knowing about – can those be edited out?
The first step? Apparently it’s verifying our humanity. Then we can get down to the hard work of figuring out what all of this means.