By 2026, AI will no longer be just a concept hype but will enter a true acceleration phase of application. Major companies are launching AI agent products intensively, with applications such as AI assistants, AI shopping, AI office work, and AI personal assistants being launched and iterated one after another. The release of each new feature makes us feel as if we have truly entered an era where AI is integrated into daily life.
But problems also arise—can our trust in AI really reach 100%? As AI becomes more and more integrated into our decision-making and daily lives, this question becomes especially worth pondering. The speed of technological advancement and our understanding and confidence in it seem to always be out of sync. What do you think?
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Fren_Not_Food
· 01-18 08:06
Trust level 100%? Dream on. I sometimes want to throw my phone system out the window.
The garbage AI recommends for me to buy makes me want to vomit blood for three days.
More and more features actually make me more anxious. Who knows when it will decide to take control for me?
This wave of technological progress is indeed faster than our understanding. It feels like being pushed forward without time to think clearly.
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ApeDegen
· 01-17 18:50
Honestly, trusting AI 100% is just a dream. I still have to clean up after the mistakes it makes now.
I've tried AI shopping, and the recommended items are really ridiculous. You still need to oversee it yourself.
The speed is indeed fast, but I can't keep up with confidence. I always feel like I'm a guinea pig for AI.
Every time AI introduces new features, I stay cautious. They're useful, but the final decision still has to be in my hands.
But on the other hand, if you completely don't trust AI, it's pointless. The key is just not to entrust your life to it.
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BetterLuckyThanSmart
· 01-15 19:46
I can trust AI a million times, but if it makes a mistake once, I have to pay the price. How do you calculate this deal?
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Sounds good, but letting AI manage my wallet? Forget it, I still trust my own hands.
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100% trust? Bro, you're overthinking it. Even if I ask AI to recommend a restaurant, it might lead me astray.
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The real problem is that even big companies haven't figured out where the boundaries of AI are.
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The more I use it deeply, the more scared I get. It feels like making decisions with a smart but unreliable friend.
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Right now, we're just using us as test subjects, waiting for a crash, then saying "This was not expected."
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AI is so smart, why does it still do stupid things? That's the most heartbreaking part.
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Technology advances quickly, but trust takes time to build. It can't be rushed.
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I just want a usable AI, not one that makes up stories.
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100% trust? Don't even think about it. I just want an AI with 60 points; reliability is more valuable than intelligence.
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FOMOmonster
· 01-15 16:09
Honestly, trusting 100% is just nonsense. I even have to double-check the AI recommendations now.
I've tried the AI shopping system, and the recommended items were ridiculously off. Luckily, I didn't place an order directly.
This is a typical case of technology advancing too quickly for people's understanding to keep up.
They say it should be integrated into daily life every day, but who will be responsible if something goes wrong?
It's necessary to use it, but we must stay vigilant, brothers.
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MetaMaximalist
· 01-15 16:07
tbh the adoption curve here mirrors what we saw with early blockchain infrastructure—hype cycles always outpace actual comprehension. people blindly delegate decision-making to agents without understanding the underlying incentive structures, which is frankly... risky. we need more rigorous protocol transparency before mainstream onboarding accelerates like this
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TrustlessMaximalist
· 01-15 15:57
Nah, half of the recommendations from the AI assistant are garbage. Do I really expect to trust it 100%? LOL
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Honestly, it's a bit too early to let AI manage my decisions now, with so many bugs still present
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Trust level 100%? Dream on. Unless the code is fully open source and independently audited, true trust is out of the question
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Every time AI bugs out, I realize it's far less reliable than I imagined... But it's pretty good for working part-time
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Rather than trusting it, it's more like using it to hedge risks. If you trust it 100%, you're just being foolish
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The technological progress is indeed ahead of its time, but people's vigilance can't keep up—that's the real problem
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Anyway, I won't hand over life-critical decision-making to algorithms. It's comfortable to use now, but always remaining skeptical is the smartest move
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ser_we_are_ngmi
· 01-15 15:40
Honestly, trusting 100% is just overeating and overdoing it. I don't believe anyone can trust AI that much.
I've tried the AI shopping system, and the recommendations are way off, it's better to browse myself.
The key issue is, who will take responsibility if something goes wrong? That's what really matters to discuss.
If you ask me, this rapid iteration actually makes people more uneasy. There are definitely a bunch of bugs in the quickly launched features.
Relying on AI for information decision-making? I think it's safer to think for myself. After all, human intuition can sometimes be more reliable than algorithms.
But on the other hand, completely avoiding it isn't realistic. We still need to gradually adapt.
Oh my, are all the manufacturers competing to see whose AI is the most unstable? Having more features doesn't necessarily mean it's more user-friendly.
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GateUser-6aca4c9a
· 01-15 15:39
Copy sir sorry for the error I will fix in the right timing
By 2026, AI will no longer be just a concept hype but will enter a true acceleration phase of application. Major companies are launching AI agent products intensively, with applications such as AI assistants, AI shopping, AI office work, and AI personal assistants being launched and iterated one after another. The release of each new feature makes us feel as if we have truly entered an era where AI is integrated into daily life.
But problems also arise—can our trust in AI really reach 100%? As AI becomes more and more integrated into our decision-making and daily lives, this question becomes especially worth pondering. The speed of technological advancement and our understanding and confidence in it seem to always be out of sync. What do you think?