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The Hidden Danger of Using AI for Answers
Posted on 8/16/25 at 10:50 pm
Posted on 8/16/25 at 10:50 pm
AI sounds confident, but when you ask it about big or subjective questions it usually gives you the safe mainstream answer. It relies most heavily on common sources and may leave out alternative or contrarian perspectives. This creates a real risk: you get a polished response that feels certain but is only showing one slice of reality.
The reason is simple. AI is built to predict the most common response, not to explore every perspective. If you stop at the first answer, you are only seeing what is most accepted rather than what might be most accurate.
The way around this is to guide it. Ask for multiple views such as mainstream, alternative, and contrarian takes and have it explain strengths and weaknesses. Ask where the sources contradict one another. Run scenarios that test what happens if one side is right, if the other is right, or if neither plays out. Flip the frame by making it argue against the majority view. Push deeper by asking what is missing, what risks exist, and what history or less common experts might say.
When you do this, AI becomes more than a safe summarizer. It becomes a tool that can map out differences and help you think critically.
The key lesson is that AI is useful, but unsafe if you accept its first answer at face value. Push it to sample widely, compare opinions, and highlight gaps. That is how you turn AI into a real decision tool instead of a mirror of the mainstream.

The reason is simple. AI is built to predict the most common response, not to explore every perspective. If you stop at the first answer, you are only seeing what is most accepted rather than what might be most accurate.
The way around this is to guide it. Ask for multiple views such as mainstream, alternative, and contrarian takes and have it explain strengths and weaknesses. Ask where the sources contradict one another. Run scenarios that test what happens if one side is right, if the other is right, or if neither plays out. Flip the frame by making it argue against the majority view. Push deeper by asking what is missing, what risks exist, and what history or less common experts might say.
When you do this, AI becomes more than a safe summarizer. It becomes a tool that can map out differences and help you think critically.
The key lesson is that AI is useful, but unsafe if you accept its first answer at face value. Push it to sample widely, compare opinions, and highlight gaps. That is how you turn AI into a real decision tool instead of a mirror of the mainstream.

Posted on 8/16/25 at 10:55 pm to RiverCityTider
It get answers wrong all of the time. Easy ones too
Posted on 8/16/25 at 10:57 pm to Madking
It is still useful, but you have to work with it. That's my point I guess.
Posted on 8/16/25 at 10:57 pm to RiverCityTider
I’ve given it simple parameters to make a work schedule and it routinely ignores the rules I give it.
Posted on 8/16/25 at 10:59 pm to RiverCityTider
quote:
It is still useful, but you have to work with it. That's my point I guess.
Captain obvious is patrolling the streets tonight. Thank you for your service
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:01 pm to RiverCityTider
It’s good for when you forget a name or forget details of something you can feed it most of the information on but on politically related questions and some historical stuff you’re gonna get NYT or WAPO answers.
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:03 pm to RiverCityTider
quote:
The Hidden Danger of Using AI for Answers
It isn't hidden. For anyone who actually cares to look it is right out in the open.
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:06 pm to RiverCityTider
Yeah it told me vaccines don't cause autism
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:07 pm to RiverCityTider
I had this discussion on the OT in one of their AI doom and gloom threads. The most dangerous thing about current AI is creating a generation of lazy, uninformed mouthbreathers who don't care to verify anything they put into chatGPT
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:09 pm to crewdepoo
quote:
Yeah it told me vaccines don't cause autism
What does it say about the Covid vaccine preventing covid?
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:10 pm to Madking
quote:
It’s good for when you forget a name or forget details of something you can feed it most of the information on but on politically related questions and some historical stuff you’re gonna get NYT or WAPO answers.
Exactly. That's the default. Its called "trusted sources" and that means MSM bias. And if you ask.AI, he will admit it. AND if you ask him for counter views, he will provide them and sources. Then if you ask him for.factual discpancies supporting the different arguments, he will dig into it.
So is how you use AI for more subjective explorations.
This post was edited on 8/16/25 at 11:13 pm
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:12 pm to RiverCityTider
That’s wasted time which defeats the point
This post was edited on 8/16/25 at 11:13 pm
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:13 pm to The Pirate King
quote:
had this discussion on the OT in one of their AI doom and gloom threads. The most dangerous thing about current AI is creating a generation of lazy, uninformed mouthbreathers who don't care to verify anything they put into chatGPT
Or that use it for things that could easily have been done with a search engine. It has incredible ability to transform humanity but people often use it for things that don't require AI
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:15 pm to Madking
Are opinions formed in 30 seconds really worth anything? Just save the 30 seconds and forget about it.
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:16 pm to RiverCityTider
You should quit using Grok. There are far better AI models out there.
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:17 pm to Kentucker
I don't use gronk. And they are all the same.
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:18 pm to RiverCityTider
You can go to a known source for the info instead is the point. AI is supposed to save time but in a lot of cases doesn’t
Posted on 8/16/25 at 11:25 pm to Powerman
quote:
Or that use it for things that could easily have been done with a search engine.
A lot of search engines have put AI summaries as the promoted first result, often with half-right answers or lacking proper context. I've started ignoring it.
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