This is relevant because it’s a very widespread survey hidden under a company blog post– 81,000 people sampled from around the world from the West to the Global South were asked by Anthropic Interviewer what they wanted from AI, what they dreamed it could do and what they feared from it.
D2Foley on
This is basically an ad
Mx_Brightside on
I’ve always found it interesting how people from developing countries are consistently more optimistic about AI than people from rich countries, and this makes it makes a bit more sense. NGL, I teared up a little at some of the stories from sub-Saharan Africa:
> Textbooks from 2006—nine planets, clunky mobile phones. Teachers earn $150 a month; 99% can’t pay for AI access. With a single flat-screen TV and free AI tools, we teach 60 kids at a time… My teaching here is now a higher standard than back in the UK when I had all the resources in the world. (Freelance creative, Gambia)
ldn6 on
I want it to stop being shoved down my throat everywhere.
4 Comments
This is relevant because it’s a very widespread survey hidden under a company blog post– 81,000 people sampled from around the world from the West to the Global South were asked by Anthropic Interviewer what they wanted from AI, what they dreamed it could do and what they feared from it.
This is basically an ad
I’ve always found it interesting how people from developing countries are consistently more optimistic about AI than people from rich countries, and this makes it makes a bit more sense. NGL, I teared up a little at some of the stories from sub-Saharan Africa:
> Textbooks from 2006—nine planets, clunky mobile phones. Teachers earn $150 a month; 99% can’t pay for AI access. With a single flat-screen TV and free AI tools, we teach 60 kids at a time… My teaching here is now a higher standard than back in the UK when I had all the resources in the world. (Freelance creative, Gambia)
I want it to stop being shoved down my throat everywhere.