Comments

Annette
April 19, 2026 at 05:35
I have a deep distrust of AI. I admit I have been fooled by it (auf gut Deutsch: verarscht!) and now I'm never even sure if a photo or video clip is real, or if a write-up has been researched and integrated by an intelligent, careful and caring human mind - or an algorithm. AI gets between the person to person and mind to mind interchange, distorting and eroding the human conversation and connection. Not sure where you can draw the line of "careful use" because AI inherently is NOT careful.
Renee
I think your distrust in AI is totally justified. There is no substitute for being vigilant and questioning everything that's important to us. But is this new? Outright lies, exaggerations, distortions, and scams have always been part of our lives, long before computers!
Let me also throw in a quote in German that I first heard some 20 years ago: 'Es stand in der Bildzeitung, deshalb muss es wahr sein'". A modern English equivalent: 'I read it on Facebook, so it must be true' or 'Trump said it, so it must be true'.
The only difference now is that AI makes ALL content, true or false, look so polished and convincing that it’s extremely difficult to tell the difference.
And on this I fully agree: there's nothing more meaningful and enjoyable than a real person-to-person connection.
Does AI get in between? That's up to us.
Marie
April 19, 2026 at 12:56
I thought about this for a while. I think if you’re using it bring out more of your own thoughts and ideas it’s definitely still you!! For example, if you’re getting it to ask questions you never thought of before, or think about perspectives you’ve never thought of before, it’s just a tool that is being used to amplify your own thinking. And knowing how thoughtful you would be using it, I feel I can be assured the result isn’t any less yours.
Renee
April 19, 2026 at 17:38
Thank you, Marie, what a thoughtful reply. Now you made me think about it for a while 💭
Renee
April 19, 2026 at 17:46
I’ve been thinking about this more, especially after reading your comments, which I’ll also include on the post page so people outside Facebook can see them too.
Many years ago, I had a job that involved planning and anticipating what kind of stereo systems Grundig, then my employer, would be selling in the future. I had my paper systems in place—everything worked perfectly.
Then the first computers started entering the workplace… and I was honestly horrified, afraid they would take away the most enjoyable part of my job and start telling me what to do.
At some point (not really by choice 😄), I took a computer course. A small part of it was programming—and that changed everything. Suddenly, I could turn the tables and tell the computer what to do. I became a software developer and have been excited about technology and its endless creative possibilities ever since.
Now, 40 years later, the arrival of AI feels so very similar. There’s no denying it will profoundly change our lives—and not all of it for the better. But just like computers back then, it’s not going away. So we might as well use it to our advantage—and hopefully to society’s as well.
In so many cases, we’re not limited to letting the machine tell us what to do—instead, we can use it to express and extend what WE want to do.

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