Not Every Prompt Deserves an Answer
Do you believe we can still control AI with human reaction alone? Can human oversight realistically keep pace with the speed at which AI is now evolving and embedding itself across real systems? To...

Source: DEV Community
Do you believe we can still control AI with human reaction alone? Can human oversight realistically keep pace with the speed at which AI is now evolving and embedding itself across real systems? To me, the current situation increasingly resembles an attempt to stop a Formula 1 car by standing in front of it and waving a hand. The issue is no longer whether humans remain involved. The issue is whether human response, by itself, is still structurally fast enough. AI Has Learned to Answer Too Well For years, we have trained AI to respond. We trained it to summarize, recommend, translate, predict, generate, and optimize. We rewarded systems for becoming faster, more fluent, more helpful, and more convincing. In many cases, we began to treat responsiveness itself as a sign of progress. But we have spent far less time teaching AI when not to answer. That omission no longer belongs to the future. It belongs to the present. AI is no longer confined to experimental demos or isolated chat enviro