Greetings all, and welcome to my TED talk. Please allow me to preface this with the following disclaimer: I am autistic, and when writing things like this, I have been known to be mistaken for AI on occasion. I'm not really sure how to prove that I'm not, so instead I'll just hope that you take me at my word.
To set the tone of this, I am posing a moral quandary. All opinions are valid here, I am not looking for people to just pat me on the back and tell me my decision is okay (though if that happens, that's okay too).
Now, for a bit of background: I went to a technical school that specialized in replacing the need for college with learning a trade. The shops at the time were mostly manual labor type stuff (building cars, houses, plumbing, HVAC, whatever that manly stuff is) then a few more creative things that I have never had skill with (graphic art, marketing, drafting and design, cooking, et cetera), and then one shop that I found I had a knack for: electronics technology. By senior year I had built a little robot that helped greet the new students, and would do the six flags "old-man" dance (dating myself a bit there).
I graduated, and immediately found out that not one single person cared that I could build a robot, it was a time where you needed a degree to work in that kind of field. So I went and got one. It was a hard pull, ended up living in my car to pay tuition (murica) and finally got my bright and shiny degree, a bachelor's in Computer and Electrical Engineering from the esteemed DeVry university. They taught me a lot about coding, and even helped me land a sweet gig right out of college for $80,000 a year, which was more money than I ever even imagined at the time.
Well, turns out, that job was specialized in replacing people. During the interview/on boarding process, they showcased things like automated forklifts, and cars parallel parking themselves. It was really neat to look at, until I was face to face with the result of our systems. Code that was maintained by six of us was being bought for several hundred thousand dollars, and then hundreds of workers were being sent home with no fall back.
My boss used the same advice that is always given in these situations: they can go back to school and learn to fix the machine that replaced them. Seemed like a great plan, except there were six of us, and hundreds of them, even if every single one of them had the mental capacity to do the job, it wasn't happening.
I lost sleep over it, and eventually waved goodbye to that job to look for other work. Only to find that pretty much everyone at the time was also trying to build systems to replace people. So I left the field. Joined the Navy, wrote a bit, fell in love, lived my life. And every once in a while I'd dust off my programming to make a little tool to help me with something.
After the Navy, I entered the field of ghostwriting. For those unaware, that's basically "AI write me a book" only I was the AI. I didn't make great money doing it, but I made a living, and I loved the work, and that was enough for me.
Whelp, as it turns out, people who are willing to pay a person to write something they take credit for writing are almost entirely just as willing to have ChatGPT do it for free. As such, I became the man replaced by the machine.
So I did what the age old advice recommended, and I learned the machine. I dove hard into figuring out how to make ChatGPT work for me, and used it to develop a bit of software based on my existing software. The more I experiment, the more I realize that there is a lot more to it than "tell a chat bot 'make me Zelda, Link to the Past'" and clicking play. My knowledge of programming actually comes in handy, and I can do things in days that would have taken me years.
Now we (finally) get to the question of morality. One of the biggest complaints I see about the use of AI is that it replaces people in the creative process. It won't be doing that with me, I'll be writing all the story (and some of the code). I have an artist as well, the same one I used for my covers, to design artistic things for games. Games that don't replace people. One of the biggest secondary concerns I see with it is about the environment. As of yesterday I've started the ball rolling on getting a PC setup that can run opensource AI locally, so no data centers involved at all.
So people doing the creativity, check. Environment just as impacted as if I were just playing Baldurs Gate 3 on my PC, check. Doesn't take anyone's jobs, just saves me the time of having to do every line (of millions of lines) of code myself, check. Fully intend on being up front and honest regarding the use of AI in development of code, check.
Am I missing some ethical dilemma that I haven't yet considered? Have I missed some aspect of the ones I'm considering solved? Or am I just overthinking it because "AI yucky" is such an easy stance to have?
Thanks for coming to my TED talk, I look forward to hearing your responses.
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