Polls Reveal Americans' Fears About A.I.
Americans are more afraid than excited about A.I. But these technologies offer far more to cheer than to fear.

Even as Americans benefit from generative artificial intelligence (A.I.)—that is, A.I.s that can create text, audio, and video—both business leaders and the general public fear the technology will lead to catastrophe.
A survey of 119 attendees of the June 12 Yale CEO Summit found that 42 percent believe A.I. could "destroy humanity" in five to 10 years. A majority said the risks posed by A.I. are not overstated.
These fears are also common among the wider public. In a May 16 Reuters/Ipsos poll of 4,415 U.S. adults, 61 percent said they believe that A.I. could threaten the future of civilization and more than two-thirds are worried about artificial intelligence's negative consequences. The poll also found that three times as many people "foresee adverse outcomes" from A.I. than those that do not.
In an April 3 YouGov poll, almost 70 percent of respondents endorsed "a six-month pause on some kinds of AI development."
Those results followed calls by public figures for restrictions on A.I. development. Notably, a March 22 letter signed by several leading researchers and executives, including Elon Musk and Steve Wozniak, claimed that "AI systems with human-competitive intelligence can pose profound risks to society and humanity" and called for "AI labs to immediately pause for at least 6 months the training of AI systems more powerful than GPT-4."
Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan called that month for a "World Congress" to regulate A.I., arguing that the technology's creators are "generally, morally and ethically shallow—uniquely self-seeking and not at all preoccupied with potential harms done to others through their decisions." During a May 16 hearing, the Senate discussed regulating A.I. with an agency similar to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Technological change has been producing reactions like these for centuries.
"Its always been easier to imagine how you get machines, whether it's A.I. or many other innovations from the U.S. during the Industrial Revolution, to automate existing jobs than to imagine how they make workers more productive in those jobs and, more importantly, what new jobs might be created," says Jim Pethokoukis, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute who frequently writes on A.I.
Science fiction has enhanced these fears, leading many to associate A.I. with deadly machines such as the ones in The Terminator. As Pethokoukis points out, "the default position by too much of society is that A.I. is going to be a dangerous technology and we need to do something about it."
"People vary in how much they fear new technology; new toasters or something like that doesn't trigger that much fear," explains Robin Hanson, an associate professor of economics at George Mason University. "But whenever a technology threatens to make fundamental changes to society, then people get much more scared. Think genetic engineering or nuclear energy."
While sci-fi-based fears undergird much of Americans' worries about A.I., the primary concerns relate to job loss. When a 2022 Tidio survey asked what people think are the least important worries about A.I., only 5 percent of respondents answered "AI taking our jobs." A full 52 percent said "AI taking over the world."
An April 5 Goldman Sachs report did predict that A.I. "could expose the equivalent of 300 million full-time jobs to automation" worldwide. But it also predicted that the technology would produce a 7 percent increase in global GDP. Similarly, a report from the McKinsey Global Institute finds that 60 to 70 percent of working hours could be automated. But that doesn't mean it will produce mass unemployment. Those freed-up hours give workers the opportunity to create wealth in new, unforeseen jobs. To block A.I. is to block those future jobs and the economic growth they'll bring.
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If the bots and some of the erstwhile establishmentarians are the best AI can do, I think humanity will be okay.
Then again….
No, they are more afraid than excited by the alarums and scarums of politicians and cronies, who in turn know nothing more about AI than they know about climate change or how to define a woman.
All the AI needs to do is tell you it is a woman.
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The sixties called; they want their computer panic back.
We went through all this way back when.
First of all, everything using a program is now called AI as a marketing tool, not as a definition of a computer system actually capable of "learning" without additional programming.
I suspect the result will be the similar, except for the fascists using the AI panic to implement still more restrictions on freedom.
Remember the collapse of civilization and decades of war after Y2K?
The people who love regulation are still sad they were too distracted to license personal computing when it came out. This is thier chance to correct that oversight.
Think of all the federal bureaucracy they could be in control of. Waiting periods, license fees, licensing.
The people who are panicking most are the Silicon Valley crowd since they're just now starting to realize that they programmed themselves out of future employment. Ironic.
>>But these technologies offer far more to cheer than to fear.
can't trust people, and people will be in charge. until we're not.
Are these the same Americans who panicked over toilet paper shortages?
So far the biggest realistic concern with AI seems to be making it easy to create fake images/writings/etc. That and putting blurb writers out of a job. I'm not losing any sleep over it.
That and putting blurb writers out of a job.
So you at least see how modern journalists feel threatened.
Note that the fake images/writing/etc aren't new. People have been doing that for decades. AI doesn't enable that, it only makes it easier. Mass production of fake news (ei. click bait) is already a thing without the help of AI.
The danger is not the AI. The danger is the extreme gullibility of the average person.
Man, one clever chatbot and the laptop class loses its mind.
First, companies requiring them to put on real clothes and drive to the office for work, and now this.
My only concern in regards to AI is developing a fetish for women with extra fingers and limbs.
I see you’ve noticed that too.
But that doesn’t mean it will produce mass unemployment. Those freed-up hours give workers the opportunity to create wealth in new, unforeseen jobs. To block A.I. is to block those future jobs and the economic growth they’ll bring.
First, I’m going to avoid the deep dive on what the current iteration of AI is and how it’s not REALLY AI yadda yadda and take the rest of this at face value.
Those freed-up hours give workers the opportunity to create wealth in new, unforeseen jobs.
Not necessarily. If you’re trained as a coal miner, and the mine closes down, that “opportunity to create wealth in new, unforeseen jobs” might be severe underemployment in that unforeseen job– if a job is available at all. In absolute terms, over generations, yes, new, unforeseen jobs pop up and present opportunities for people, write large, to find new ways of working.
Not everyone in society is a free-wheeling hustler, ready to take on their “promethean transformation” and go from coal mining or working on an oil rig to being the social media manager for a vegan restaurant chain– which can now be done via a clever chat bot.
Not everyone in society is a free-wheeling hustler. But everyone WILL be a hustler. No free wheels, though.
FYI, the morning lynx could absolutely be run by a chatbot. Just sayin'.
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So could any of the columnists, in fact I suspect Fiona's columns are really an AI bot.
The danger is that a public that can't tell that the most obvious of fake news is fake will be hoodwinked by bad actors using AI to generate even more authentic seeming fake news. That is it is a nutshell. The AI just makes it easier to crank out the shit, but even without AI we still get that shit.
Note that back in the late 70s Omni magazine (but I date myself) worried that photo editing technology would make it impossible to know which photos were real and which were fake. Dude, we've been there for a couple decades at least. The latest AI images have a higher quality to be sure, but they're not anything a human artist could do with a decent photo editing tool.
The danger is not AI making fake photos (Trump being arrested, etc) but that most people are so damned credulous that they instinctively believe any shit put before them. My mom will believe anything. I knew instantly that Trump picture was fake, but I've also run across images I needed to verify.
People need a bullshit detector. They need a training in both critical thinking and a healthy mistrust of anything people say. Not just because of politics, but to protect them from scams. If you cant' even manage to avoid phishing attempts, then AI is going to own you before the decade is over. And no amount of hand wringing by congress will stop it. So start getting some common sense now.
The genie is out of the bottle, there's no putting it back. Ban it here and there will still be China and Russia. Fretting and voting won't save you. DeSantis is not your savior, Trump is not your savior, Biden and Harris are not your savior. YOU YOURSELF need to take care of yourself by getting a fucking clue. Stop eating whatever shit is being fed to you. Just stop it.
p.s. The other danger, which I do not consider a danger, is that those intellectual vocations that do not require any intelligence will be replaced by AI: college administrators, politicians, HR departments, etc. If your job entails producing endless vacuous statements, then AI is going to replace you. So start learning a useful skill.
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
The day that AI replaces the entirety of Middle Management will be a banner day for humanity.
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the current ai tech is very crude, nothing more that a sophisticated pattern matching algorithm. there is no intelligence in the ai.
For a moment I considered addressing this. Only for a moment though.
The moron media has managed to scare the stupid amongst us - freaking out about "SkyNet" when the real problem is Betsy the court clerk.
Who vets the AI?
We know how to vet candidates for important positions. Do we know how to vet AI applications used to make important decisions?
If you don't understand the danger don't feel bad, nobody's been talking about it even though it is a big within the AI community.
Who vets the AI?
Who vets the AI?
CEOs.
We know how to vet candidates for important positions. Do we know how to vet AI applications used to make important decisions?
Silicon Valley CEOs know how.
Actual SCIENCE fiction by physical chemist Isaac Asimov predicted in "I Robot" that IT would de-fang looter kleptocracies. Governator flicks by the guy who skimmed three chapters of Atlas Shrugged upside-down, thinking that was the Austrian German translation, imagine AI will assist the corporate "artificial persons" FDR referred to in his banking "holiday" inaugural making possession of gold a felony. Those non-constitutional APs may turn out to be the droids the AIs are looking for. Je je je...
They should be fearing corrupt leftist dictator wannabes more right now. Biden is a good example.
My favorite sci-fi AI is Mike from the moon is a harsh mistress.
Just be glad our caveman ancestors never heard of the precautionary principle. We'd probably still be arguing about using this new-fangled "fire" thing.
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