Years ago, when we bought our first Google Home unit (as soon as it was available), I described the technology as “magic”. I demonstrated it to my kids, pointing out the fact that you could ask the Assistant for the weather, or to explain something, or translate from one language to another. You could ask for any song to be played, or any movie to appear on the TV via Netflix. This disembodied voice would listen and then do your bidding. “Your with is my command!” Yeah, magic.
This was (and is) the kind of science-fiction universe I envisioned as a kid, a world where a supercomputer living in my house would listen in and chat with me, answering questions, playing music; you know, all that stuff it can do now. I also envisioned living in an orbital hotel, going to Mars for a holiday, or zipping through the sky in my flying car, but you know… baby steps.
But the magic has continue to come. Now, we’ve got generative AI, so the magic just keeps getting more magical with every passing day. Stable Diffusion, Dall-E, and Midjourney will create an image based on your written description. ChatGPT will write a poem for kids that explains nuclear fusion, and when it gives me 8 stanzas and I only wanted 3, it will turn around and give me that.

Magic!
Lately, things in the world of generative AI are getting downright scary. Whether you think it’s scary good, or scary bad, is something I leave up to you.