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Are We Entering the Age of Data Nihilism?

Article by Alice Xiang: “Every click, every photo, every search query we make creates a digital echo. These digital traces are the raw material fueling the AI revolution, powering technologies that are reshaping our world. Yet for the people creating it—all of us—this data has become functionally worthless. 

The average internet user doesn’t think about the value of their data. They simply give it away to some of the wealthiest companies in the world, for free. 

Because of this behavior, I fear we are living in an age of data nihilism, where our data means everything to AI developers yet almost nothing to us—not because our data actually is value-less, but because people feel powerless to stop it from being collected against their will. …

The next step is for the AI community and regulators to take ethical data curation seriously. The economic power dynamics between AI and humans will largely be determined at the data layer, and as a result, questions about consent and compensation mechanisms for data rights holders should be a major area of focus for AI researchers and regulators. Creating opt-in or opt-out schemes that provide meaningful control to people around the world whose data serves as AI’s raw materials is a challenging task, but one that is critical to address now. Moreover, as AI developers exhaust available data, future innovations will likely depend on the quality rather than simply the quantity of data. 

Nietzsche’s cure for nihilism was to create personal meaning, but the scale of AI necessitates creating systems that affirm and protect the value of humanity’s contributions. We are now at a turning point: if we fail to build such protections, we will resign ourselves to a future where the benefits of AI are concentrated among a few, and the vast majority of people find their contributions worthless. The future of AI should not be built on a foundation of mass data appropriation. It must be built on a foundation of respect, consent, and shared value. The age of data nihilism is upon us; it is up to us to prevent it…(More)”.

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