The direction of AI products to actual consumer needs is exactly what I would like there to be, and exactly what I think there will be if we focus on tools that are actually built for people, to help people.
What we're seeing is a mixture of that, in some cases, with another dynamic—the same dynamic that drove the social media rollout—of trying to capture as large a part of the market share as possible, as quickly as possible. For example, I'm an educator—all three of us are—and, overnight, it happened that I could not assign essays to students, or even problem sets in physics or mathematics because suddenly there was an AI system that would simply do the students' homework for them. The students feel essentially that they have to use AI to write their essays or do their problem sets because all of the other students are using those things. This is not something that was demanded by the educational system. This is something that was pushed into the educational system, to the detriment of our students.
