Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Alexa’s Just Not That into You
Alexa’s Just Not That into You
Jul 14, 2026 12:17 AM

What do you do when your smart home starts outsmarting you? The dangers some forms of artificial intelligence pose are just beginning to be realized.

Read More…

A few weeks ago, software engineer Brandon Jackson found himself shut out of his smart home for a full week. When Alexa wouldn’t respond to mands, he called the Amazon help desk to see what the issue was. Evidently, pany locked him out because of his apparent racism: “I was told that the driver who had delivered my package reported receiving racist remarks from my ‘Ring doorbell’ (it’s actually a Eufy, but I’ll let it slide).” Later, without any explanation or apology, Amazon allowed Jackson access again.

Jackson later viewed this experience as a lesson in keeping devices local and diversifying smart-home service providers. However, the meme used by Not the Bee of the puter HAL from 2001: A Space Odyssey, responding, “I’m sorry, Dave. I can’t unlock your house,” is a more accurate observation. Considering people’s increasing dependence on artificial intelligence (AI) to manage their lives, it’s only inevitable that these devices will render users helpless and vulnerable to corporate control.

Around the same time that Jackson was assuring Amazon that he wasn’t racist, the article “Why AI Will Save the World” by Silicon Valley entrepreneur and venture capitalist Marc Andreesen went viral. As the title suggests, Andreesen argues that AI represents a huge technological advance that will boost worker productivity, eliminate global strife, precipitate a cultural renaissance, and “make the world warmer and nicer.”

According to Andreesen, AI is like other technological innovations in that it makes tasks easier to perform and leaves more time for other things. Like a dishwasher or a Roomba freeing up homemakers from the drudgery of cleaning dishes and floors, AI will free workers from so much thinking. Enlightened populations in the future will be able to contend with an plex world by equipping themselves with “infinitely patient, passionate, infinitely knowledgeable, infinitely helpful” AI.

Andreesen sanguinely insists that people will work side by side with AI, resulting in ever more social progress. Writer Sam Woods goes further with this idea in a recent article, “Who’s on the Other End of the Chatbot?,” suggesting that AI can function as a thinking partner that can help us better understand ourselves: “You can have LLMs [Large Language Models] interrogate you, argue with you, challenge your assumptions, challenge what you’re saying and thinking.” This would certainly lead to better decision-making—assuming the user is still the one making decisions.

However, what AI boosters like Andreesen and Woods seem to miss is that AI’s technological capabilities represent a difference in kind, not degree. Unlike construction vehicles or self-service checkouts, which automate basic functions like digging holes or processing orders and purchases, AI is plex functions like deliberation munication. Instead of acting as a tool that enhances or supplements human labor, it is essentially replacing it.

To say that this will free people to grow smarter and help society progress is like previous generations declaring that television and the internet would do the same thing. In all likelihood, most people will use the free time enabled by AI to “amuse themselves to death.” This was predicted by the brilliant sci-fi novella With Folded Hands… in which androids take over the world and prevent human beings from doing anything because it would expose them to stress or harm. Finally, the androids start lobotomizing everyone, leaving all men and women to sit dumbly in their rocking chairs “with folded hands.” For a more kid-friendly version of this story, one can also watch Wall-E.

As a high school English teacher, I had to laugh at Andreesen’s hypothetical AI tutor “helping [students] maximize their potential with the machine version of infinite love.” Why would any kid listen to puter try to teach him how to write essays or solve algebra problems, especially when puter can do these things itself? And what exactly would the “infinitely loving” AI tutor do to make a student more cooperative? Would it be empowered to reward or punish the student by increasing or limiting access to various amenities and recreational applications? “Solve for X, and you will be allowed five minutes of TikTok.”

This dilemma hits on something deeper about AI and its supposed potential for boosting human performance. Sure, AI is infinitely more knowledgeable, rational, and objective than any human being, but this makes it fundamentally unrelatable. Unlike human teachers, who can have relationships with their students (which is how they motivate their students to do their work in the first place), AI software lacks such a capacity. They can’t feel disappointed in their “pupil” slacking off, nor can they take pride in her achieving mastery—they can only impotently simulate these feelings.

Because a true relationship with AI is impossible, it is therefore impossible to trust AI. It’s not that the AI will somehow e self-aware and turn evil; it’s that AI is bound by its programming and lacks a conscience. As in the case with Brandon Jackson, or more recently Fox News, AI programs are designed to spy on their users, report them to an unaccountable megacorporation, and then be used to punish those users and pliance.

Andreesen seems to recognize this danger when he mentions the abuse of AI technology in dictatorial regimes like that overseen by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP): “They view it as a mechanism for authoritarian population control.” Already, the (CCP) uses AI to monitor Chinese citizens, assign a social credit score, and reward or punish them based on their score. This forces the entire Chinese population to submit to the CCP’s agenda, no matter how stupid or brutal it might be.

The same could easily happen with any Big pany—nearly all of which, not coincidentally, have close ties with the CCP. Whether it’s Amazon, Apple, or Google, panies have every reason to disempower consumers and make them ever more dependent on their products. Their ideal user is not the talented young visionary discovering ways to colonize Mars but the couch potato discovering new ways to spend his UBI check. In return for sucking the life and soul out of their users, panies pensate by disincentivizing them from using hateful language and expressing problematic views

Nevertheless, with all this acknowledged, the possibility of an AI-driven surveillance state doesn’t necessarily mean that AI technology is intrinsically evil and should be avoided at all costs. Rather, it demonstrates that AI technology is powerful and its use must be regulated so that all Americans can enjoy its benefits while being protected from its harms. It falls to us to e educated on AI and do our part to hold all levels of government accountable for keeping us safe as well as free with this new technology. We cannot assume, like Andreesen does, that governments and businesses will automatically act rationally and try to empower people with AI; rather, we should assume the opposite, cultivate personal discipline with our technology use, and remain vigilant in curbing excesses and abuses. In practice, this would mean allowing the use of AI in a productive capacity (analyzing and processing data for industrial mercial use, for example) but not in an invasive personal capacity (monitoring and determining individual behavior). Put simply, we must all make sure that AI remains a tool and doesn’t e an unwanted friend.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
COVID-19, socialized medicine and ‘deaths of despair’
The American healthcare industry is undergoing a massive stress test known as the coronavirus. For months and years e, analysts will be issuing their opinions about just how well that industry performed under the incredible, sudden surge of the pandemic. Given the massive influx of stimulus funding for healthcare and programs like Medicare, no one should be surprised about a “barrage” of new lobbying activity and a surge of activism for single payer or universal health care. Getting just ahead...
J.D. Vance and the politics of resentment
Resentment is plicated emotion, a curious mix of disappointment, disgust, anger, and fear. The villainous poser Antonio Salieri in Miloš Forman’s Academy Award-winning film Amadeus is a study in resentment. In his youth, Salieri, desired nothing more than to make music. Salieri admits Mozart was his idol and that “I can’t remember a time when I didn’t know his name!” He confesses he was always jealous of Mozart’s talent but still makes a successful career as poser in Vienna. When...
COVID-19 reminds us of the humanizing aspect of work
With “shelter-in-place” orders across the country during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, most employees are not allowed to enter their work places unless their work is considered “essential” by their state and local governments. Opportunities for normal employment have been disrupted for millions of people around the world. Sadly, many workers have been furloughed, others laid off entirely, and the fortunate ones, thanks to advances in technology, are able to work from home. Beyond the obvious financial implications for individuals, and...
Science: Human beings were made for creative cooperation
Popular culture presents the human race petitors in a selfish struggle for the survival of the fittest. However, new scientific research finds that the human race has a natural tendency to cooperate—and that religion increases philanthropic giving and voluntarism during a crisis. “Humans are quite possibly the world’s best cooperators,” according to a summary by the Templeton World Charity Foundation, which sponsors research into the topic. “Cooperation has never been more relevant” than during the global pandemic of COVID-19. Scientists...
Build yourself, build society
One of Christ’s best-known parables is the Parable of the Talents, but its familiarity disguises just how strange and unsettling its message is. It is a parable of a master who departs on a journey and entrusts three servants, each according to his ability, with his property. Each receives five, two, or one talent(s), respectively. The ablest servant departed, immediately put the money to work, and doubled his master’s talents. The servant entrusted with two talents did the same. But...
Acton Line podcast: Responding to a Harvard prof’s call to ban homeschooling
Homeschooling is growing in popularity. In fact, the U.S. Department of Education has shown that it’s grown at a rate of over 60% in the last decade, as many families are deciding that educating their children at home is better than sending them to public or private schools. But Harvard University has a different opinion. In Harvard Magazine’s May/June 2020 issue, one Harvard Law School professor calls for a ban on homeschooling, saying it may keep children from “contributing positively...
Rethinking free markets in an age of anxiety
On December 26, 1991, the USSR’s Supreme Soviet passed its final piece of legislation. Declaration Number 142-Н formally stated that the Soviet Union had ceased to exist as a sovereign entity. That vote sealed America’s victory in the Cold War. Many also believed that the twentieth century’s primary economic contest—socialism versus capitalism—was over. Across the world, even nations with long histories of dirigisme seemed to be embracing markets. All that seems like a long time ago. Today market skepticism is...
A free-market agenda for rebuilding from the coronavirus
On June 18, 1940, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill steeled his people for the Battle of Britain with a stirring speech in the House of Commons that concluded: “Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties, and so bear ourselves, that if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will still say, ‘This was their finest hour.’” The present coronavirus crisis calls for Churchillian statesmanship, yet few, if any, democratically elected leaders have proven equal...
Alejandro Chafuen in Forbes: Latin America’s coronavirus situation
Last month Alejandro Chafuen, Acton’s Managing Director, International, published a piece on detailing Latin America’s response to and preparedness for COVID-19. He recently followed up with a new post that brings his analysis up to date and highlights the situation’s relationship to the rest of the Americas. The leaders of Brazil and Mexico remain targets of criticism, and it remains to be seen what effect, if any, changing seasons will have on the virus’s spread. The coronavirus has so far...
Cooperation vs. coercion amid COVID-19
As the COVID-19 crisis rolls on, many of America’s governors have continued to impose, extend or add new restrictions to stay-at-home orders, leading to increasingly arbitrary rule-making and growing criticism over the prudence and practicality of such measures. Thankfully, individuals and institutions rely on more than government diktats to guide their behavior. In turn, amid the government overreach and tense ideological debates, civil society appears to be self-governing rather well — marked by plenty of individual restraint, collective wisdom and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved