Asimov's Robot Stories & AI: Bridging Fiction and Reality episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 9, 2023 · 46 MIN

Asimov's Robot Stories & AI: Bridging Fiction and Reality

from A Beginner's Guide to AI

🤖📚 The Robot Followed the Rules. That Was the Problem.What if AI becomes risky not because it refuses to listen, but because it listens too literally?In this episode of A Beginner’s Guide to AI, we use Isaac Asimov’s robot stories and the famous Three Laws of Robotics as a starting point for understanding modern AI ethics. Asimov imagined robots that were designed to avoid harming humans, obey human orders, and protect themselves. That sounds neat, safe, and reassuring. But his stories showed the uncomfortable truth behind those rules: real life is too messy for simple instructions.This episode connects Asimov’s science fiction to today’s debates about AI safety, responsible AI, AI governance, human oversight, transparency, accountability, and AI alignment. The central question is not only whether AI can follow our commands. The real question is whether we have defined those commands wisely enough.📧💌📧Tune in to get my thoughts and all episodes, don't forget to ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠subscribe to our Newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠: ⁠⁠⁠⁠beginnersguide.nl⁠⁠⁠⁠📧💌📧We explore why AI systems can create harm even without bad intentions. A machine can optimise for engagement and damage trust. It can follow a metric and miss the human meaning. It can make decisions based on biased data and still look objective. It can do exactly what we asked, while failing to do what we actually meant.The episode also revisits the real case of Microsoft Tay, the chatbot launched in 2016 and taken offline after users manipulated it into producing offensive content. Tay remains a useful warning for any company building chatbots, AI assistants, recommendation systems, or customer-facing automation. AI systems must be designed for real human behaviour, including misuse, not only for the polite version of humanity imagined in a strategy meeting.💡 Key highlights from this episode:🤖 How Isaac Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics shaped the AI ethics conversation⚖️ Why simple rules are not enough for safe and responsible AI🎯 How AI can follow instructions and still create the wrong outcome📉 Why bad metrics can turn automation into reputational risk🧠 What AI alignment means for business users, marketers, and executives🏢 Why accountability must stay with people and organisations🔍 Why transparency and human oversight matter in AI decision-making💬 What Microsoft Tay teaches us about chatbot ethics and AI misuse📌 How the Asimov Test can help companies think before deploying AIThis episode is for founders, marketers, executives, business leaders, and curious beginners who want to understand AI ethics without needing a technical background. If your organisation uses AI for content, customer service, hiring, analytics, decision-making, or automation, this episode will help you ask better questions before the system starts acting at scale.About Dietmar Fischer: Dietmar is a podcaster and AI marketer from Berlin. If you want to know how to get your AI or your digital marketing going, just contact him at argoberlin.comQuotes from the Episode“The danger is not always that AI disobeys us. Sometimes the danger is that it obeys us too well.”“The machine may do what we asked, but not what we meant.”“The chatbot did not rebel. It obeyed the world it was given. And that was the problem.”Chapters00:00 The Robot Followed the Rules00:55 When Robots Became a Moral Problem08:07 The Three Laws Were Never the Whole Answer24:53 The Cake Robot and Perfect Obedience29:24 Get Smarter Before the Robots Get Polite29:57 Microsoft Tay and the Chatbot That Learned the Wrong Lesson35:23 The Rule Is Not the Wisdom39:59 The Human Must Stay in the Room43:06 Keep Your Website Working While You Work on the Business Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Aug 9, 2023

🤖📚 The Robot Followed the Rules. That Was the Problem.What if AI becomes risky not because it refuses to listen, but because it listens too literally?In this episode of A Beginner’s Guide to AI, we use Isaac Asimov’s robot stories and the famous Three Laws of Robotics as a starting point for understanding modern AI ethics. Asimov imagined robots that were designed to avoid harming humans, obey human orders, and protect themselves. That sounds neat, safe, and reassuring. But his stories showed the uncomfortable truth behind those rules: real life is too messy for simple instructions.This episode connects Asimov’s science fiction to today’s debates about AI safety, responsible AI, AI governance, human oversight, transparency, accountability, and AI alignment. The central question is not only whether AI can follow our commands. The real question is whether we have defined those commands wisely enough.📧💌📧Tune in to get my thoughts and all episodes, don't forget to ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠subscribe to our Newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠: ⁠⁠⁠⁠beginnersguide.nl⁠⁠⁠⁠📧💌📧We explore why AI systems can create harm even without bad intentions. A machine can optimise for engagement and damage trust. It can follow a metric and miss the human meaning. It can make decisions based on biased data and still look objective. It can do exactly what we asked, while failing to do what we actually meant.The episode also revisits the real case of Microsoft Tay, the chatbot launched in 2016 and taken offline after users manipulated it into producing offensive content. Tay remains a useful warning for any company building chatbots, AI assistants, recommendation systems, or customer-facing automation. AI systems must be designed for real human behaviour, including misuse, not only for the polite version of humanity imagined in a strategy meeting.💡 Key highlights from this episode:🤖 How Isaac Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics shaped the AI ethics conversation⚖️ Why simple rules are not enough for safe and responsible AI🎯 How AI can follow instructions and still create the wrong outcome📉 Why bad metrics can turn automation into reputational risk🧠 What AI alignment means for business users, marketers, and executives🏢 Why accountability must stay with people and organisations🔍 Why transparency and human oversight matter in AI decision-making💬 What Microsoft Tay teaches us about chatbot ethics and AI misuse📌 How the Asimov Test can help companies think before deploying AIThis episode is for founders, marketers, executives, business leaders, and curious beginners who want to understand AI ethics without needing a technical background. If your organisation uses AI for content, customer service, hiring, analytics, decision-making, or automation, this episode will help you ask better questions before the system starts acting at scale.About Dietmar Fischer: Dietmar is a podcaster and AI marketer from Berlin. If you want to know how to get your AI or your digital marketing going, just contact him at argoberlin.comQuotes from the Episode“The danger is not always that AI disobeys us. Sometimes the danger is that it obeys us too well.”“The machine may do what we asked, but not what we meant.”“The chatbot did not rebel. It obeyed the world it was given. And that was the problem.”Chapters00:00 The Robot Followed the Rules00:55 When Robots Became a Moral Problem08:07 The Three Laws Were Never the Whole Answer24:53 The Cake Robot and Perfect Obedience29:24 Get Smarter Before the Robots Get Polite29:57 Microsoft Tay and the Chatbot That Learned the Wrong Lesson35:23 The Rule Is Not the Wisdom39:59 The Human Must Stay in the Room43:06 Keep Your Website Working While You Work on the Business Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Asimov's Robot Stories & AI: Bridging Fiction and Reality

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🤖📚 The Robot Followed the Rules. That Was the Problem.What if AI becomes risky not because it refuses to listen, but because it listens too literally?In this episode of A Beginner’s Guide to AI, we use Isaac Asimov’s robot stories and the famous...

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