Computer Looking Up
  • Home
  • Welcome
  • Categories
    • Astronomy & Astrophotography
      • Deep Sky Objects
      • Equipment & Processing
      • Solar System
      • Space Exploration
    • Technology How-To
      • Apple & iPhone & Mac
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Linux & Open Source
      • Networking & Hardware
      • Windows & Microsoft
    • Life & Leisure
      • Dispatches
      • Hobbies & Interests
      • Reflections
    • Rings of Envy
  • In the Sky
  • AI Policy
  • Archives
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Welcome
  • Categories
    • Astronomy & Astrophotography
      • Deep Sky Objects
      • Equipment & Processing
      • Solar System
      • Space Exploration
    • Technology How-To
      • Apple & iPhone & Mac
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Linux & Open Source
      • Networking & Hardware
      • Windows & Microsoft
    • Life & Leisure
      • Dispatches
      • Hobbies & Interests
      • Reflections
    • Rings of Envy
  • In the Sky
  • AI Policy
  • Archives
Computer Looking Up
No Result
View All Result
Computer Looking Up
No Result
View All Result

AI’s Public Relations Apocalypse

Paul by Paul
May 6, 2026
in Artificial Intelligence
0
8
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on X

For nearly four years, I have been using and leveraging what we refer to as “AI” – specifically AI as it is known today, which is generative AI and a touch of agentic AI. This was more of an AI reunion for me, as I did “learn” AI over 30 years ago, at least what was considered AI back then. Still, I do not, by any means, consider myself an AI expert of any type. But I have become very acquainted with Gen AI, what it can, cannot, and should not do, and what I can do and cannot, and should not, do with Gen AI.

I recognize there are many problems and issues with Gen AI, not the least of which is hallucinations. AI raises all sorts of dilemmas and moral quandaries, from the workforce to childhood learning to the military, tangents and spectrum explosions abound. It’s all, frankly, too much for any of us to process and interpret, especially on top of all the other non-AI problems with societies, civilizations, and the world at large. We, humans, were never intended to absorb all the pain and worries the world over, which technology easily and gleefully delivers. If you let it all in, you will go insane, which may explain much of our societal state today.

YOU MIGHT LIKE...

Rethinking How We Visualize Generative AI

Rethinking How We Visualize Generative AI

November 21, 2025
Someone Had to Blab to the World About AI and Now We All Pay the Price

Someone Had to Blab to the World About AI and Now We All Pay the Price

April 29, 2024

While I was toiling away on AI lessons, playing with chatbots, and experimenting with prompt variations into the early morning hours, something was germinating in the population. I doubt I have the vocabulary range to properly describe it, but my best guess is simply resentment. Resentment towards AI. It’s all over everywhere, and has permeated all vectors of information. History could very well decree AI our collective scapegoat for all that has befallen us in the 2020s, and what is yet to come this decade.

Gen AI outright lies and misleads, no question. AI destroys jobs and job opportunities, no question. People are fearful of AI. They equate AI with SkyNet from Terminator, for valid and some not-so-founded reasons. The long-term impacts on childhood learning due to AI may not be known for decades. AI has arguably cost lives, or caused people to act against their own best interests thanks to the vortex stirred by AI’s default, cheerful reality bubbles. Agentic AI, which is effectively Gen AI automation, has people worrying that we ourselves will ultimately be transformed into disposable cogs that only serve the machines.

AI is also demonstrating secondary destructive tendencies. The DDR5 apocalypse is so in every sense of the word, and the PC market may never recover back to sane supply and reasonable pricing as the thirst for AI capacity grows. And speaking of capacity, data centers are the latest boogeyman that is projecting and reinforcing AI’s poor perception.

Human, to human, we need to have a real discussion. No AI. No handoffs to my AI author. No AI curating of any kind, especially not this article. Just us, you and me, two people, two real people.


AI has no public relations department beyond the tech moguls who appear only interested in the AI arms race among their competing juggernaut corporations. At least, that’s the perception they exude, and perception is everything in the realm of public opinion.

There is no relation on the true positives of AI, or even the blunt realities of AI. It’s easy to mock AI, to fear it, to even bury your head in the sand to pretend it doesn’t exist. But the cold truth is that AI is here to stay.

So we have to learn it, to embrace it, and to learn and embrace it responsibly. Maybe not because we want to, but because we have no choice. AI is the greatest paradigm shift in technology this century, if not going back a century. There is no putting the AI genie back into the bottle. Even if, hypothetically, the West decides to deter use of AI, it’s highly unlikely the rest of the world will oblige, particularly China.

We must acknowledge that our current workforce must adapt to use AI, and that our children need to learn how to use AI appropriately. And all must be accomplished within a responsibility framework that places AI into a proper use context, with prudent boundaries respecting moral and ethical norms.

If you still believe you can avoid AI, can continue the resentment, can continue the ridicule, then consider this – if you don’t truly understand AI, for all its problems as well as all of the benefits and opportunities it makes possible, you, and our society at large, will be in no position to tackle all of the problems, dilemmas, and questions wrought by AI. To a large degree, I feel this explains our current situation, where far more people are willing to lash out and blame AI than to realize we can use that same AI to help us navigate those very difficulties.

It’s not easy and it won’t be neat, but it’s the only way, lest we become a society that rejoices in ignorance and destines our future generations to control – control by machines or those who understood our 2026 conundrum and acted accordingly, or both.

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related


Discover more from Computer Looking Up

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Tags: CommentaryGenerative AI
Previous Post

A Certain Point of View on Pluto — Through the Eyes of a Machine

Paul

Paul

I am the founder and creative director of Computer Looking Up. I have been fascinated by space since childhood. My interest in technology also runs deep, rooted in fond memories of the CRT-anchored desktops my father tinkered with in the early 1980s. Professionally, I have spent over 30 years immersed in the technology sector, serving in capacities ranging from programming and IT to project management. Outside of work, my passions lie in astrophotography, astronomy, and philosophy. Through ComputerLookingUp.com, I explore these interests and aim to build a community where we can share insights—I hope you will join the conversation.

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

POPULAR POSTS

  • AI's Public Relations Apocalypse
    AI's Public Relations Apocalypse
  • Grinding a Telescope Mirror: The Non-DIY Project
    Grinding a Telescope Mirror: The Non-DIY Project
  • When I Decided to Build a Telescope
    When I Decided to Build a Telescope
  • Simple Fix for Asus ZenWiFi "Flashing Blue Light" Problem
    Simple Fix for Asus ZenWiFi "Flashing Blue Light" Problem
  • Prompting with Caution: AI, Mushrooms, and the Art of Not Getting Poisoned
    Prompting with Caution: AI, Mushrooms, and the Art of Not Getting Poisoned
  • Reduce AI Hallucinations
    Reduce AI Hallucinations
  • Moon, May 29th
    Moon, May 29th
  • My Artemis Confession
    My Artemis Confession
  • Goose Moon II - More Goose, Less Moon, Cameos, All Sequel!
    Goose Moon II - More Goose, Less Moon, Cameos, All Sequel!
  • I Love Everything About My Honda Ridgeline Except for This One Problem
    I Love Everything About My Honda Ridgeline Except for This One Problem

RECENT COMMENTS

  • Paul on Jupiter and the Galilean Moons, March 2026
  • Ggreybeard on Jupiter and the Galilean Moons, March 2026
  • Paul on The Nihilism of Modern Freedom
  • Ggreybeard on The Nihilism of Modern Freedom
  • Paul on Jupiter on March 9, 2026

EXPLORE TAGS

AI Generated Asterisms Blogging Comets Constellations DIY Dobsonian DSLR Eclipses Fedora Galilean Moons General Photography Generative AI Home Improvement Home Network ISS Jupiter Maksutov-Cassegrain Mars Mercury Meteors Moon NAS Nature Photography Philosophy Pluto Politics Religion Reviews Saturn Schmidt-Cassegrain Sci-Fi and Fantasy Science Sketching Smartphone Stars Streaming Sun Synology Telescope Venus Video Games Weather Windows 11 WordPress
  • Home
  • Welcome
  • Categories
  • In the Sky
  • AI Policy
  • Archives
CLEAR SKIES / CLEAN SHUTDOWNS

© 2026 Computer Looking Up

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Welcome
  • Categories
    • Astronomy & Astrophotography
      • Deep Sky Objects
      • Equipment & Processing
      • Solar System
      • Space Exploration
    • Technology How-To
      • Apple & iPhone & Mac
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Linux & Open Source
      • Networking & Hardware
      • Windows & Microsoft
    • Life & Leisure
      • Dispatches
      • Hobbies & Interests
      • Reflections
    • Rings of Envy
  • In the Sky
  • AI Policy
  • Archives

© 2026 Computer Looking Up

%d