AI and particularly the tech executives promoting have created a growing backlash from the general public. The backlash is due to multiple topics associated with AI. A few years ago the public was generally excited about AI. That excitement has turned into suspicion or even dread.
People are worried AI tech will eliminate many millions of jobs. The AI promoters always respond with BS such as
"the displaced workers will be free to find new jobs" (without being specific on what jobs those will be) or
"they'll have all kinds of freedom by not having to work." Yeah, whatever. Elon Musk likes floating the pie in the sky Utopian idea of "universal basic income" as a remedy for the job loss potential. UBI ain't happening. The core motivation of developing this AI tech is creating vast amounts of profit by eliminating human-held jobs. Simple as that.
There is a great deal of concern over what governments will do with AI-based technology.
Serious hazards exist for letting AI replace human software developers. ChatGPT or Claude may be able to write code in any number of programming languages. But the generated code is often a mess. A software bug or security hole might be really hard to fix if the code is a bunch of gobbledygook. Some firms that were quick to fire human developers had to later re-hire some of those former employees or find new ones if they recklessly burned bridges with the firing process.
Of course, anyone who works in a creative field ought to be concerned. AI bots can generate a fiction novel in mere seconds, but the quality of the writing and overall work will be strangely off. AI bots can quickly generate creative images, but it's not hard at all to spot sloppy flaws.
Here's the problem about visual AI slop and why it's dangerous to the jobs of professional graphic designers, illustrators, etc.:
the AI slop looks "good enough" to an untrained eye. People who have no creative talent often don't understand the difference between good quality and bad quality graphic design. They don't notice the details. They overlook the glitches and hallucinations. They might feel the odd
uncanny valley vibe wafting off artificial images of people or other familiar things. But they're still prone to accept the generated results as
good enough to get by -especially if they think AI will save them a good bit of money.
It sounds like some business people in the tech media are cheering on the possible job losses in creative fields. Adobe's stock price has been getting hammered lately via reactions to AI tech developments. These people don't understand what goes on in a work flow of a creative company, such as
sign company. AI falls apart in many specific areas. Those facts are getting lost in all the AI hype.