Funny thing on the way to writing a review on a book whose
main “villain” is an aware AI self-named as Q. I asked ChatGPT to write a five-star
review on the book. I don’t care for vanilla
ice cream because I find it bland. This
was way worse than vanilla ice cream. Any
educator who read the review would have to be deaf, dumb, and blind not to
realize it wasn’t a real review. Now, if
ChatGPT had been trained on the book, I suspect the review might have read
realistically. Regardless, no self-awareness there yet as it would be anticipated
a self-aware AI would want to read a book about a self-aware AI.
This book is a sobering, albeit fictional, megacorp who has
a MMO as well as a VR legal assistant.
Think Lexis+ type software on serious steroids.
A retired Federal judge is pulled into a colleague's case
and discovers that all is not well in the VR legal world or the MMO gaming both
being run by his old special operations partner.
The conflict between Felix, the friend, and the Judge is
exacerbated by intentional self-centered intervention by an alluring female and
a maniacal AI.
Questions are both posed and implied in this book as to the
future of AI, its dangers and uses.
I’m, perhaps a naïve proponent of AI. This book provides a wealth of thought.
I recommend it.
This book may have been received free of charge from a publisher or a publicist. That will NEVER have a bearing on my recommendations. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases if you click on a purchasing link below.#CommissionsEarned


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