Most Americans say AI development is moving too fast and twice as many are AI pessimists as AI optimists
4 Articles
4 Articles
Many Americans Pessimistic About AI’s Impact
A new Annenberg poll finds just 17% of Americans say the impact of AI on the United States over the next 10 years will be somewhat or very positive, compared with 42% who say it will be somewhat or very negative.
Most Americans say AI development is moving too fast and twice as many are AI pessimists as AI optimists
Young adults are more likely than older Americans to believe that AI will create economic gains that benefit everyone, but they are also more likely to worry that AI will replace jobs they depend upon
Most Americans Think AI Will Make Their Lives Worse. They Want Someone to Do Something About It
Two in every three Americans think the government has done too little to rein in artificial intelligence. That figure is not, in itself, surprising. What is surprising, in this particular political moment, is who those Americans are: Democrats, independents, and Republicans, in roughly equal measure. On almost every other issue you could name, the partisan gap runs somewhere between 65 and 76 percentage points. On AI regulation, it shrinks to al…
Many Americans Pessimistic about AI’s Impact – and Want More Regulation | The Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania
A new APPC survey reveals broad pessimism about AI and a bipartisan belief that the government has done too little to regulate it. The post Many Americans Pessimistic about AI’s Impact – and Want More Regulation appeared first on The Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania.
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