This is growth in progress The podcast where we have unfiltered conversations about early adulthood and all the things you're probably thinking about but not having the conversations about. Each week you were joined by me, Charlotte. I'm me Hell. If you're a millennial or maybe an older Gen said, and you want honest and helpful conversations about wellness self development, the latest trends and all of the other pressures, life brings then you're in the right place.
In this week's episode, we're gonna be catching up as always sharing a couple of recommendations that we've really enjoyed, and then we're gonna be tackling the issue of Ai. Before we dive in, if you like this or any of our other growth in progress content, then make sure you hit follow and if you'd like to support us more than our Patreon and newsletter subscription are down in the show notes for you. How are you doing? You've had a crazy week I swear? Not a crazy week, but it feels like
a very... Awesome week. How did take get night away couple of days away with my mom in liverpool. We saw friends from the Us down in London. And we've been on a narrow go in Wales for the past week. And then this weekend, that see my brother for the first time in over a year. Son my brother. Time before we left for Asia. So... That's wild. I can't believe it's been that long since you've seen here. But it's crazy. So it's been a very packed last 10 days, but in a really good
way. It's been very fun now I need to sleep and recover and remind myself, They do need to recover, not just dives australian. But yes. Rest is key. Can highly recommend a narrow voting trip if anyone's ever looking for something quite unique to do in the Uk. Hiring an narrow. They just let you drive that thing. But if you like an a hour tutorial and then I'm like, yep, there you go. And there you are just driving a 50 foot boat around on the waterways of England and wales.
I don't know if you had Lulu me out at that point. She was just a shocked as we were that you can just hire a boat. But, like, what is going on. But but does some recall, especially at this time of year, but Yeah. It was gorgeous. First day was very rainy after that. It was sunny. And so much so that the the work I've done to get rid of my tan lines on my wrists. Far. On now back. Sadly 7 7 weeks before the big day. The the time line the back. So were fine. I don't... A too
much more summer in the Uk. So it might fade in time now. Yeah. It was just 4 days, so that was that was my dose of vitamin d for the summer items. Oh, yeah. Like, some people call it summer, We call it a heat wave in the Uk. So It always amaze Taylor, who is from Florida that whenever it's hot for, like, several consecutive days in the Uk. It's all over the
news. It's a heat wave. We're looking at what the hottest temperature is in the whole country and when was the the last temperature records that he just finds it fascinating, but we all lose our mind, the media is losing their minds over like 4. Days and he like, yeah, this is just my life, for a single day for like 20 years. Yes, Taylor, but you had air corn. What Yes. That is the big difference. Think Can't... Also, I think there's a part of it that it's a novelty,
oh, a hundred percent. That's why. And then all everyone does is complain about how hot it is. Yeah. Like, my flat right now is 26 degrees. Yeah. That yes. Ridiculous. Like we snow it's snow vibe. It is not. How are you... What have you been up to? We've had a lovely wholesome week as well. We went down to see Alex's family. And this is 1 of the joys of being able to wear from anywhere is that I was able to work where they all went out for the den and enjoyed Sunshine.
And we spent some time with his ground who I absolutely adore. And Saturday night, You guys will have loved it. Saturday night. We got out the fire pit and we sat in the garden, fire, cuts of tea, and we were listening to country music as Graham Loves don Williams. Oh, and we were just sitting out there chatting, laughing. They've put some bats in their loft. But like, non harmful bats, like, chill a little. And you're not allowed to get rid of facts in the Uk. It's
like a they're protected species or whatever. Anyway, were were just watching a fly around, like, whiz around the garden. It was so cute. We took Lily with us since she was an absolute angel, and it was just really nice to see, like, her being so comfy somewhere else. And, yeah, It was just very wholesome and lovely and carol ice creams. Oh my god. Like, I am a big Kara fan anyway. But I don't know if Kara mac is cadbury whether that's nestle, but either way, dairy milk.
Cadbury oh my god. Cadbury, that big brand. Now do caramel milk and they do caramel milk ice creams and oh my gosh. Best around. Amazing. Last night, I had... I hate all forms of custard, except mad acid and vanilla custard. And is Charlotte laughing at me make very much. I had no idea about this. There's a hang up school
was a hangover of school. You know when used to get like, the skin on the top, and it was just well, and it was like, half solidified because it was it it was gone cool in the Oh, my god. I I find custard absolutely vile. Except. Have no idea about this. I think what 12 years I had no idea you have pho custard. Have a similar sentiment. About rice pudding and Sem. So that, like, very similar formats covid. I love them all.
On. My favorite thing is when you get a really good rice pudding, and you've got the thick like the burnt skin on the top curves so now it's made to pop green. Oh my god. This is actually making me feel nauseous. No. The only 1 I like is Mad vanilla posted. Oh my god had some last night. I mean, obviously, shouldn't be consuming that volume of dairy. But you're talking about that volume of dairy just made me think about that custard again, and it is elite, elite cluster. Was it the MS1?
No. I actually think it was, This 1 is very good though. I do like. I'm 1 best. Still a oil even I'm not there anymore. Now you've led a fun fact about me and and 1 of my random folk. We also covered bats in that conversation, which are another over of mine. Yeah. You what? I don't love bats, and I went through a bat tunnel once at the zoo in Prague, which is a whole other side story. Well, those those things are awful. Horrendous. I hated it, like, truly the most
terrific experience. But when they're just out and they're flying around in the Uk. I don't mind so much because they're like, They come near you, and they're just, like cute little birds. But. So you uk get that bad. My fear comes from the fruit back. In Australia. And that where the wings spans like a meter. Yeah. No. That. I would cry. I would cry. If I saw that. It's in horrendous on that note. Anyway, recommendations,
what's your recommendation for? Our recommendation is a bot and it's called everyone on this train is a suspect by Benjamin Stevenson. This keeps coming up on my good Eats as a recommendation. I loved it. It's... I think I recommended his first book, which is everyone in my family has killed someone. Yes. So I recommended that last year. He's Australian, both boxes set in Australia. The second book, I think it's just as brilliant as the first. It's kind of a modern.
Who done it, and it's set on the gun frame, which is the 1 that crosses the Australian outback. And it's a very he writes the books as if they're auto book bio graphical. Like as if he's the 1 as if he's is earnest, his main character life. If you've read everyone in my family killed someone 1, it's... The exact same thing. It breaks the fourth wall a lot. He talks to the reader as if he is the 1 telling in the story, but obviously, it's not Benjamin, it's his character earnest.
And he invited onto this brain because there is is a literary event there for, I guess, like thriller and crime writers. And he's invited there because of his first book, Everyone in my friend. Has killed someone. And, obviously, there is at least 1 murder that happens on this train. And I always think the murder on the training thing is such like a Ag Christie trope. Been done. So much, and I was very skeptical about reading this book? That's why I've not read
it. Because I mean, how do you... How do you reinvent the the wheel, but I love that it's like the literary event publishing aspect. I think he manages it really well. Like, I was thinking I would love to see... And I don't know if this is how he does it. The whiteboard, but he has... When he's writing a book. To try and link all of the characters and what all
of their stories are. Because everyone on this train has a motive or a secret to hide and the links that he creates between people is fascinating. I thought it was Ring well done, and I read it in, like 4 days, which I've not done that with a book for ages. So no. That is good. Definitely recommend it for an easy. It's not gore or anything like that. It's an easy, entertaining. I'm who done it, high book? Nice. What is your recognition?
Far like I don't have 1 recommendation this week, I have 2 smaller recommendations so I'm gonna cheat and merge them into 1. The first is and the the reason I'm doing this the first recommendation is so niche, it will only be beneficial like a small percent of our listeners. But if it's beneficial to then, it be really beneficial. So my cousin had a gorgeous baby a couple of weeks ago. I'm obsessed with her. All I want to do is put photos in
her daughter's your squishy face. However, they're on the other side of the Atlantic. This downside of having relatives in Canada is that they're also in Canada for these big life moments.
So she has shared an app with us called family Album, and it is a secure and safe way to share photos of your children with family members who may be aren't around, whether that's just because, like, they live around the corner and you don't see them all the time and you wanna update them or whether you're, like, traveling or if you just live on the other side of the world. They It's obviously far safer than putting on
Instagram or Facebook or anything like that. You can only see it if you're invited through a very specific link that expires quickly. It's basically an answer 1 of our biggest fears, which is how do you share moments of your kids and not compromise their safety. Obviously, if you're gonna use this fewer kids read into it all yourself. Like, I'm not an expert on this, but I just thought
it was such handy app. So I wanted to mention that because that there is nothing that brings me as much joy as seeing that a photo has been added to that album. It's truly just the most joyful thing. Oh, that the other thing, which I don't know if you would have seen this on tiktok. But it came up and it is just a bit of me. The account is called Ram on the Pan am, and it's about a couple called Rachel and now I can't think for saying Matt. I'm sure to think how they start their
videos. I'm Rachel and I'm matt. Anyway, yeah. Rachel Amount, and they are driving from the Pan American Highway all the way, like, from the top to the bottom of the Americas. So they are from Britain, they flew out to... Where did they fly out? I wanna say the flats and ban or someone like that. They... Food calgary. They bought this like, old truck that they've done up, and they've driven it all the way up to the arctic ocean and now they're driving it all the way down.
So they're loading, like, a little daily vlog day on Tiktok. It's not quite in real time, Obviously, for clear safety reasons. It's about 2 weeks, like, behind where they actually are in real time. Not only is this absolutely fascinating.
And I love a little sniff of a daily vlog and seeing someone's life, but also, it is beautiful, and they do a really good job of breaking down the absolute highs and the absolute lows and the reality of doing something like that because on my god, I just would not have the patience. But it is gorgeous. Like they've driven through the Yukon. 1 don't. Yeah. It's truly amazing. It's gonna take them ages to get to a trial, but
that makes me quite happy? Because it's so like how long are they planning for the whole... Like, do they have a set time or are they just I don't think they've said how long it will take because then there's a part in somewhere in Central America where there is no road, so they have to take a boat. My gosh. It's crazy. So, like, this is not an easy drive. I imagine, like, when they're in mainland Usa, it will be slightly easier.
But I guess look it's such a cool concept to see someone do, and I'd heard about the Pan American Highway, but I haven't realized how long it was. Yeah. Yeah. Just really great easy content. And I'm, like, it is the first time ever I have gone on to Tiktok to specifically look up an account and to watch something. Is also interesting of itself. But yeah. But sounds behavior change. Amazing. Let's gonna look that as well. Oh, yeah. And right now, they've got I in on.
And yesterday, they shared day 7. And you've got quite a bit of content to capture on. Alright. I'd also this is such like a tragic me thing to be interested. I'd love to see how they plan this trip, like to what extent they have planned all of their stops, How long they're gonna spend in places like, how far are they d touring off the the highway to see other things around it? Like, yeah. So the thing is, well the other part of it is, like, things have already gone
really, really wrong in a week. They're, like, we have to extend or stay here and we have to go see this place to get this thing fixed and so, like, surely, they can't have, like, I don't know They've got like, a deadline because you just could never to not who covering in that distance across that in many places. But equally, like, I imagine when they get to, like, the Usa, it will be far quicker. Than it is going through the Yukon.
Yeah. Yeah. And it also are easier to fix any issues and stuff like that on your understanding. Yeah. They're like they're driving for days and not seeing people. So, yeah. It's just brilliant love it. Summer recommendations. Sounds fabulous and also slightly stressful as well. Would just be like, well you fuel, how much fuel are they carry? And Don't so much for a solar powered. Mean, does the the panel keeps falling off? Oh gosh.
Yeah. Don't watch it. It's, like, please watch it today so we can discuss it because they're my favorite people on the Internet. Literally pause while I this to my to do this day because I read. But what I love is that each little vlog is, like, a minute, 2 minutes long it's on Tiktok. So you can catch up quite quickly. Right. I'm looking it out today. We will recon beam
Yeah. I love it. It did take me until last night when I was writing out my recommendation that the Ram is not the type of vehicle, but it's rachel and that. There and it. I I did assume it, that was what it is. When he said Ram, you were like, Rachel and Matt, and Was, okay, it must be r and m. Yeah. Took me, it took me over a week to realize but I got there. Anyway, I am so excited for this conversation about Ai. And this has been broke.
It also feels long overdue, and I feel like this might just be the start of the conversation because there's so many angles and ways that we could discuss this because obviously, Everyone's talking about Ai. Like, we can't ignore the rise of Ai. In our lives. But this conversations come from a very specific incident that we chat about this week, which I feel like you're probably best place to introduce.
So, yeah, We... We're we're basically waiting to find a way to talk about it that felt really relevant to us and this week, if you're in the Uk, you're probably be familiar with Sheer likes, it's an online publication in the fashion beauty. I mean, to be fair, it's not just fashion beauty and wellness, They've really manager out over the past 2 years. And there were really popular platform for Millennials also Gen z and then Gen an older.
I just need to caveat this. I'd never actually heard of sheer luxe before you sent me this. So if you're like, what the heck is this, please don't feel like you've missed out on something a massive thing because I did... I'd never heard of Sherlock locks before you sent this. So I mean, this is a aside there about algorithms because this is the circles we run, like, Sheer locks are saved on my home screen. From like, oh my gosh.
That's like... That's for a slightly different reason which we will discuss at la later to date. But yeah, like, they're, And I guess it is like the world's Set with the marketing and stuff like that. But they're a big deal. This week, they introduced their newest editor. So what they've managed do really well is calculated on E. So employee generated content. Each of their employees and their main editors are do huge social media
personalities in themselves now. They've actually started their own talent management agency to kinda keep that talent in house. And so they are constantly, like, for shame what is normal and innovating and bringing everyone on that journey with them. But this week they introduced a new editor called Re. That's fine. However, when you click through to the article, you quickly find out that Rem is not a real person, she is an Ai generated Ai powered.
Creation, and it kind of didn't have the effect that they were hoping it would have it has received a hell of a lot of backlash. She is... And what would do is will link the article in the show notes below because I think, like, go and look at that quickly because it provides a lot of context, but she is a... She appears to be a slim attractive Middle Eastern woman. They've kinda shared her favorite salad, and what's on her desk, and what's in our handbag, but obviously, she doesn't exist.
And it was he's. It was kinda met with a lot of why have you done this? Like why have you used Ai in this way? And a lot of the criticism level was relating to the fact that they have been held to account previously for diversity hiring and how they incorporate diversity in their at their business because frankly, it's not where it should be. Then instead of hiring a woman of color as 1 of their journalists, they've created an my ai version. Also obviously links in fact conversation of Ai...
Seeing our jobs and all of these things. And this isn't gonna be an episode specifically about that Shea luxe article and the debacle that's surrounded it. And the p P nightmare frankly that has erupted from air. But I think it sparks a really interesting conversation that is relevant to us how do we embrace a huge change like K that is coming down the tracks and happening whatever we think?
In a way that feels right for us and our lives and allows us to hold ourselves and everyone else around us accountable to how we use it. I think the Ai and accountability piece is so so important. Not just here, but also how it's being used in in general. Think you'd be afraid of Ai because there is it's potential is unknown is potentially limitless. Yeah. Ai is just beginning. It's just starting we've got all we've got chat Gb. We've got Gemini, we've all of these things that are coming out.
This is just the start, and what really tricked me up with the Share looks thing is when I clicked on it, and they had... Like, the images of her sat on the sofa with their editor in chief. Yeah. It took me a second to wrap my head around the fact that they'd created, like a visual that was not, like, it didn't even look like an Ai generated image.
And there's definitely something there about section and the way that you are, We don't wanna say twisting a narrative, but they put that out there to very clearly feel like it was representing something that was not real. But it was out there in a way
that made it... Seem entirely real because that then they came out and kind of clarified that their team had had created the content and the answers to the questions, and it was a very hard response to people questioning why they'd why they'd created Rh and think that's the dangerous part about non disclosure and the accountability that you need to have are gonna use Ai in that way. I agree. I'm also as a side note, interested on why I don't think the instagram posts is labeled as with our Ai.
Which obviously is a big thing. But I think it's... You're right. We've got find a way to embrace it. It's happening and I think sitting there going, I don't like it. It's just not helpful. You will just get left behind. It's like. With... Computers and the Internet, social media and all of these things that come in, you can't just pretend it
doesn't exist, but I think it's... That's how we still hold people accountable because there's gonna be so many times we all get it really, really wrong, whether that is, using Ai to write an essay at school or using it to kind of... I don't know. You can use it for anything can't you that. The that you... Especially generative Ai. There's a hundred and 1 ways you can use it. We will get it from on a personal level and also on a business level.
It's the But I think what's important is we kind of make sure all the way along, we're taking the lessons that we've already learned. And still buying it. It's an the example of the Share piece. They've already been challenged on their diversity. And they're were... And the conversation more white is how would we make this industry. And all industry is more diverse, whether that's from ethnicity, sexuality, gender, weight all of these different things. Don't then kind of go,
Okay. Cool. We'll go do this thing without considering those things. And, of course, we weren't in the room. We don't know those things weren't considered. But from the end product, it looks like they weren't. And they weren't considered properly. And I think we just need to find a way to keep our ourselves accountable because and I don't think that's necessarily Anything wrong with... I don't think it's necessarily malicious, I guess to get it wrong. Because it's part of the process.
I think the real harm is when we make the same mistakes again and again. And when we don't hold our hands up, and that's part of this thing with Share The apology isn't what many of us would call an apology. And that in itself is a problem. Mh. Yeah. I mean, we're not... Everyone makes mistakes we're not like, saying you can't ever make a mistake, but I think the bay already... Like you said they've already been called out on their diversity hiring.
And if you already know that that is an issue, 1 of my big things I feel about Ai is that it makes people lazy and this really ties the accountability because from my perspective of someone who doesn't even... She didn't even know who what She looks was. To me, that came across as like, oh, look at this fun shiny thing we'll do and everyone will think it's really cool, and they've not considered the consequences. They've not considered the impact and the perspective of what they've
done. And I'd read something really interesting about magnification, And I think this is such an interesting topic on for Ai because Ai, currently, as we know, Else to chat Gp is probably the most famous. But all Ai has to be trained on wins that already exist. And if you're training Ai on whether it's the internet or peak, like culmination of people in an office or whatever it might be. Your Ai is always going to mag feelings and sentiments and opinions that are already
there. And I think Ai advanced advancement is going to advance those existing sentiments online, things like discrimination, misinformation, exclusion, and it's going to, yeah. If we're not careful, especially because Ai is let's face it, like, it's in the hands of the wealthy mostly right now. Well, this is the thing. Right? And I think that it's going to drive inner a inequality because the Ai is being trained on things which are not unbiased? No. Because And I think it's...
You're right. It's the innovation sits among those with the most privileged already. Yeah. And it will serve to mag that and even when we have... There's something like chat Gp could in theory be access by anyone with a smartphone, but the quality. Of the Ai and what it generates in chat Gb versus a program that is specifically created for a specific university or industry or whatever it is is not
gonna be the same. So there's still that disparity in how you can access it and how you can use it and the judgment comes along with that, And I think... Chat Gp only trained up to the on 20 21 or 20 22 if you have the free version. So yeah most people don't even know that. So if your... It Don't know researching something that's I've got a lot more current information. You're not even getting that most relevant stuff in.
No. And it's... I I think for all the brilliant brilliant things, if we're not careful, we won't you... We won't get it right at all. And kind of on the compelling flip side of Shea logs. 1 thing I saw in the past week that was actually excellent use of Ai and marketing Ai. Is Samsung's new set of adverts. Have you seen them? I don't think a half no. Okay. Go
away and watch them. I'll try and find them on Youtube and link them on the show notes as well, but there would 2 that appeared in the cinema when we went a couple of weeks ago. The first was, with a kid who had just moved to a new country and can speak the language, and he uses the Ai in his phone to make friends with the kids ask if he can pay football and, like build all these relationships really cute.
And then there was another advert that was talking about, like, Ai in life, and it gave examples of things like a fridge that could tell you what's about to get a date. Or could give you recipe ideas and washing machines, it can detect what the drying cycle should be. If you put it on the wrong 1, final fix it for you. These things that would actually make our lives that be easier. Instead of it being Ai taking copywriting jobs, it's Ai,
doing the life admin. So the copy writers can do more copy writing. I I just thought... That's brilliant. It's I literally... I have this written down here. I saw a quote and I think it was from either a journalist or an author a couple of weeks ago. This is exactly the same thing, and it was it was a tweet. They've tweeted and said, I love my job. I don't need
Ai to do my writing for me. I do need Ai to do the dishes and remind me when to take the bins out on what I need to add to my shopping list. And think yes. There is the discourse that... But, I don't believe the discourse that I... Ai is gonna take our jobs. Because there will just be other jobs and other opportunities get them. People thought the same when the Internet came out. People thought the same in the industrial revolution. Like machines are replacing humans.
They might in some areas, but there will be other opportunities. We're not all gonna become jobless. But, yeah. We think there is so much power opportunity in Ai. In our daily lives could be harness and utilized and like, what point of they ai is to make life easier it's... And I get... Like, I can't just sit here and say, why isn't... Why don't have a smart fridge a yet that tells me what I need to add to my shopping list? Obviously, it's expensive.
It probably does exist, but I can't afford that fridge, but Think that is there is a lot more potential that we're not aware of. We're just seeing extreme stories. The exactly the stories of of companies or people that get it really wrong or what was that researcher? There was a a really big research article published by a university and the introduction had it introduction had the prompt. They was, like, write an introduction to a research paper that blah blah blah blah blah. It had that... And
they... And I'm like wasn't no 1 checked this. This what I mean by is making people lazy, But like, that's the most extreme and awful example, it was in the Bbc news or whatever. Bbc bbc vpc news, but I sound like an old person. But you're seeing all of these negative and extreme examples.
I am excited to see what those other examples will be in ways that it can be used in scenarios that actually help people in the daily of life to I also think that we haven't necessarily either been told or being fully aware of how Ai had been in our life for years and using years already. Yeah. And we don't necessarily think of it Alexa. Sorry if you're listening if it's out loud and you have 1 of those. But any kind of... Spoken device c device. Yeah. Phone device whatever they're called.
That's Ai. You go on to Amazon onto Tesco onto what any website, the recommendation all other things you may like, Almost certainly me Ai generated. Yeah. And that's helpful. Like, that is fundamentally helpful We've been living with it for years and years without that fear. I think the difference is when it kind of gain speed, and it's like that's snowball effect. If you'll get bigger and bigger quicker and quicker.
And so we have to understand more about it and be more aware of it, but it's not like we woke up 1 day and Ai was suddenly there. Yeah. It's been there a long time. I just don't think that people want. Ai generated influencers and editors and stuff it doesn't add value. Like M and s tried it years ago, didn't really were. And if you go on to the M and S account, all the Share account and look this up, you'll see the comments are basically along withholding She likes to account. A lot of it is,
none of us want this. None of us have asked for this. And I was kinda talking to someone about this and said, what what I would have loved is an Ai chatbot. Sure it could have still been called Rem and she could had a little chatbot icon. But actually, what I could do is say I want to take a friend for dinner for a special wheel in South London and spend maximum hundred pounds per person, what's your recommendation. And it's Mh. Always their
articles and gives me that. That is the sort of Ai that's really helpful. Wow. And I think if we focused too much on the really big scary Ai. We will avoid it at a cost to ourselves, we just need to do it in a way that we can also have the conversation to go, oh, is that right? Just because it's new and shiny doesn't mean it's right. And I do think, I guess like, fictional narrative has created this gap between what we expect from what
we're starting. To theater. Yeah. Like I always think but I grew up watching Ir robot. I loved Ir robot. Another fab film, Ex Mc absolutely incredible movie. I think they're both such fascinating and terrifying movies. Now we're in a situation where robots exist, heat like. People, but robots are being existed in the in the light being existed, being created, in the likeness of people.
And this is where the danger is with the power of Ai being concentrated in a very, like, small group of people and with the wealthy because Ai can very easily be weaponized, and we've been taught to fear that because of because of pop culture because of these movies and books that have existed before. And again, it's another extreme example of, like, the the the furthest point that we could possibly get to.
But it is those smaller instances where Ai can be used in your daily life that I think people just aren't aware of, but they're ultimately the things that it's going to it's gonna make a difference, and it's gonna be really useful and really powerful To. Well, I think about, like, elderly people in my life who would get so much benefit from from Ai, if it was able to help them with things cr things that they
need and and stuff like that. Imagine a cooker, that knows when it's been on longer than the thing that it was cooking should be cooking. How many times. Have you heard of friends and family who are concerned for elderly relatives, who have left hops on? Or Yeah. Not turn something off or whatever it it's, like, all of those uses are good and can help us and the planet you know, If your fridge can help you
reduce food waste. That's a good thing, but doesn't mean your fridge is gonna take over the world. I definitely think there's more to this conversation. We... I'm sure we will come back to it. In the future. When another story, another topic, something else called because I do think Ai is an an unavoidable an ever growing area that it it's gonna be in our lives. We we we can't avoid it. It is seen a meteor rise, and I think it's gonna continue.
Yeah. Course it is which means that this conversation will probably continue at some point as well. Yeah. I think it's just the important to keep having the conversation that in height. Challenging yourself on how you think about it. They don't just dismiss it, embrace it and understand your actual feelings on it and why you have those fears because We always fairly unknown, but I think there are so many things that we have feared
because they're unknown and now we go. Oh, no, Of course, Mobile is are helpful. Like. It's just perspective and framing. And also if you are using Ai in any way. Just I'm not suggesting that you're gonna have anything like the scale of... Cheer looks Debacle. But if you're using it to, I don't know. Right. Says for Uni or to, I don't know, create pieces at work, I do think it's just a good reminder that there still needs to be accountability behind However, you're using Ai.
Yeah. And just thinking about that when you do use it? If you are also in kind the marketing digital marketing online space. You're looking at jobs. I would also really recommend adding that to the questions you asking a job interview you what your Ai ethics? And do you have Ai morality clauses and things like that because it was fascinating. I was interviewing for jobs, and I don't, I asked that question and some of the responses I got with very enlighten. So when Yeah.
Recommend adding that to for this. But we hope that you have enjoyed this episode. We will be back next week with a brand new episode, more recommendations. But if you want more in the meantime, then sign up to our newsletter or our Patreon in the show notes, and we will a little more content to you and have a fat. Hi. Hi.