People assume that computers will do everything that humans do. Not good. People are different from each other and they are all really different from computers.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
People don't understand computers. Computers are magical boxes that do things. People believe what computers tell them.
The big question society will have to answer is whether it wants computers thinking like humans.
Computers, like automobiles and airplanes, do only what people tell them to do.
Our lives sometimes depend on computers performing as predicted.
People think computers will keep them from making mistakes. They're wrong. With computers you make mistakes faster.
For all their expertise at figuring out how things work, technical people are often painfully aware how much of human behavior is a mystery. People do things for unfathomable reasons. They are opaque even to themselves.
People who are more than casually interested in computers should have at least some idea of what the underlying hardware is like. Otherwise the programs they write will be pretty weird.
If you want a machine to be able to interact with people, it better not do things that are surprising to people.
If computers remain far worse than us at image recognition, a certain over-confident combination of man and machine can elsewhere take inaccuracy to a whole new level.
Men and machines are good at different things. People form plans and make decisions in complicated situations. We are less good at making sense of enormous amounts of data. Computers are exactly the opposite: they excel at efficient data processing but struggle to make basic judgments that would be simple for any human.
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