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BumRushDaShow

(165,265 posts)
Sat Dec 27, 2025, 11:09 AM 4 hrs ago

An AI pioneer says the technology is 'limited' and won't replace humans anytime soon

Source: NBC News

Dec. 27, 2025, 6:00 AM EST


NEW YORK — When Andrew Ng talks about AI, people listen — in classrooms, boardrooms and Silicon Valley. The researcher-turned-educator-turned-investor has become an AI statesman of sorts, co-founding Google Brain, which became part of Google’s flagship DeepMind division that now produces some of the world’s best AI systems, and serving as Chief Scientist of Chinese tech titan Baidu.

In today’s influencer-obsessed information landscape, Ng’s biggest claim to fame might be his credential as a “Top Voice” on LinkedIn, an honor the platform gives to a select few handpicked experts, with over 2.3 million followers.

Armed with decades of AI experience, Ng says he remains clear-eyed about AI’s abilities. “The tricky thing about AI is that it is amazing and it is also highly limited,” Ng told NBC News in an interview on the sidelines of his AI Developers Conference in November. “And understanding that balance of how amazing and how limited it is, that’s difficult.”

Over the past few years, generative AI has attracted hundreds of billions of dollars in investment as nearly every major tech company has pivoted towards the industry’s hottest topic. But in the last several months, many have questioned whether the surging investment has created a bubble now at risk of bursting due to persistent issues like hallucinations, AI’s involvement in mental health crises and increased regulatory scrutiny.

Read more: https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/innovation/andrew-ng-says-ai-limited-wont-replace-humans-anytime-soon-rcna246074



It IS a bubble and the amount of resources being expended to create datacenters that will not have enough power to operate nor enough staff knowledgeable to maintain the hardware itself (with all the focus on software programmers), looks like a catastrophe in the making.
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flashman13

(1,974 posts)
2. Might I add that you can only divide the pie of potential users so far. There is no way all of these data
Sat Dec 27, 2025, 11:46 AM
3 hrs ago

center builders can gain enough users to pay any sort of reasonable return on investment. That's essentially why the bubble is going to burst.

flashman13

(1,974 posts)
5. In the end the big guys will gobble up everyone else for pennies on the dollar.
Sat Dec 27, 2025, 11:59 AM
3 hrs ago

A vast number of investors are going to take it in the shorts.

cstanleytech

(28,182 posts)
3. Well I got agree there as when it comes to writing they are extremely limited.
Sat Dec 27, 2025, 11:47 AM
3 hrs ago

For example if you try one for say writing a story or something it'll initially be okay but as precedes it starts to lose track of character relationships, past events and even the storyline.

not fooled

(6,593 posts)
7. Yep.
Sat Dec 27, 2025, 01:58 PM
1 hr ago

AI seems to me to be useful for answering simple, factual questions that benefit from sweeping reviews of large amounts of information, Or, of course, performing well-defined rote tasks that can be automated.

But compare with a human brain when it comes to extrapolating from existing information to create something new, such as writing a story? No way. Or, in my experience, analyzing and interpreting complex visual images, such as of art and antiques. I use reverse image searches to price items I'm considering buying at auction. Google Images which I assume is AI based does a wretched job most of the time, frequently missing the era entirely or wrongly guessing the nature and function of an item. I'm not technically sophisticated enough to define why AI sucks at this, but...it does.

William Seger

(12,173 posts)
6. One serious limit: AI bots are completely incapable of actual logic
Sat Dec 27, 2025, 12:15 PM
3 hrs ago

When AI bots imitate human speech, they might sound perfectly logical, but that's really just accidental and definitely not guaranteed. Actual logic requires evaluating the soundness of premises and the logical validity of conclusions (in the sense that they cannot be false if the premises are true), NEITHER of which AI bots are capable of.

Shipwack

(2,980 posts)
8. While he's correct, it doesn't matter.
Sat Dec 27, 2025, 02:10 PM
1 hr ago

What matters is whether the pointy hair bosses believe this. A lot of them don’t, or have been sold a bill of goods by the consultants they overpayed to advise them.

The “smartest” of them know AI is crappy, but they feel it’s “good enough” to replace a whole lot of people. A whole slew of entry level writing jobs at publications have been taken over by bots. They haven’t thought about where new mid level writers are going to come from… Then again, maybe they’re hoping that by the time that’s an issue AI will have advanced enough.

ToxMarz

(2,735 posts)
9. AI isn't really that much intelligence (for now at least), it is automation on steroids
Sat Dec 27, 2025, 02:21 PM
1 hr ago

it requires a huge amount of proccessing power to achieve, but it is basically the capablities we've already had with the much greater proccessing power through high end (expensive) chips and gpu's locally and mutli--billion $$ cloud data centers. It is mostly running routines and instructions we've had previously, but with a better more human like interface and expanded features that were considered a waste of the capped computing power generally available previously. As such more trained personel were previously needed to interface with the automation as it wasn't so user friendly.

mdbl

(8,040 posts)
10. I heard the same thing from an industry insider
Sat Dec 27, 2025, 02:55 PM
34 min ago

He told me that it will only be able to do menial focused tasks. If AI is completely relied upon, it will give poor customer service due to it's limitations. When I asked why there is so much hype around it he said it was because the entire AI stock market bubble is reliant upon convincing investors that it will save all kinds of money and be sold to everyone. He informed me that companies that are buying and/or considering it are already seeing it's limitations and aren't happy with it many of the implementations. As soon as the market gets that, the bubble will burst. The sad part is, they will be forcing down everyone's throats for the time being and we as the general public just have to deal with shitty service.

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