Vraith wrote:I'm hoping to start getting beta-readers for early in the new year.
Dude, I'd love to read what you got! I promise not to be too hard on it.

With that said, I'd totally understand any reluctance due to our works apparently being similar in nature.
Vraith wrote:PS...oh, SURE, peter...W says you should read it and you're all in...totally ignored MY recommend. 
I noticed that too! LOL.
WF wrote:A good reason to consider the danger of AI is this: when 1% of the people in the world control all the resources, all the money, and all the armed forces, and when both production and services are automated, and when both innovation and problem resolution are provided by AI, then the other 99% of the people in the world will be unnecessary, expensive, and (from one perspective) unsightly.
Should this be a concern? It depends on the compassion you expect from the 1%. So you might ask: How are they treating unemployed people looking for food, clothing, and shelter so far? Have they been very gentle and caring when they put people out of work with automation and AI?
I suppose this is another thing that bugs me about AI fears, that they largely seem yet another reason for people to be suspicious of things they are already suspicious about. Confirmation bias.
What if AI allows people to compete against the 1%? What if it's an empowerment tool? The Internet has certainly been a tool for the empowerment of less powerful people, whether it's spreading (virtually) free education, or amplifying niche voices, or amateur journalism. It has given ordinary people a global voice. AI could do something similar.
I have repeatedly stressed how automation of jobs that are easily automated will free mankind from "shit work." It will drop prices of necessary goods to negligible amounts, making it easier to purchase a subsistence level of living, which in turn will increase demand for more personalized, customized, luxury services. People will be employed more and more in jobs that no computer can do, even with AI. More fulfilling employment.
What possible use will it serve for the rich to automate the production of everything if no one is employed to buy these things? They'll have warehouses full of stuff they can't sell. Either they'll give it away--like free stuff is given away on the Internet today (maybe with the hope that you'll make a purchase)--or there won't be mass automation. Neither case is a disaster. The former case is the Star Trek economy.