When we look at technology focussed places like Arstechnica, we can see that the tech enthusiast crowd - in which I'd include myself - is highly skeptical of the AI hype. The most common attitude is 'I can't wait for the bubble to burst'.zerocrossing wrote: Wed Apr 15, 2026 2:37 am ... there will be a huge bubble burst
... Too much desperate hype about AI,
The hype is coming from the finance crowd.
A good starting point for evaluating what is going on is clearly separating what is available today, what the actual capability of the tech is right now, from any future predictions that rely on guesses and assumptions - both on the hype side, as well as on the doom side.
Whenever I try the tech, I'm surprised just how bad it is, how high the failure rate is, and how limited the quality of the result is.
When you ask a chatbot basic music questions, you get an answer similar to one from a 13 year old Youtuber who has been playing for no more than a year.
So, more often than not, something between outright wrong and poorly informed.
Data scavenging does not include evaluation of the data, it does not differentiate between competent expert information and clueless amateurs.
A good example of the insane hype is the claim that AI can 'cure cancer'.
It can do possibly quite useful things in the early stages of drug development - assuming that the information that it puts out is actually correct - but no more than that.
Regarding Sam Altman: the recent profile in The New Yorker offers some quite interesting insight....
[Edit: looks like The New Yorker changed the Sam Altman article to be viewed as paid subscription only now, there is an archived version that can be accessed free of charge...]
