Yes! That sounds like it could work! But as long as it isn’t something people can get a career in, it’ll just stay in the realm of a cool but easily forgotten idea. This is why I think it’s so important to hire people to work in technical alignment. If it is even a slightly theoretical possibility, it would get people thinking about it more seriously.
I feel there may be more to it, focus testing might provide some answers, get to the heart of why they don’t take tech disruption more seriously.
Here’s a crazier but more specific possible course of action: When I was visiting Albania in 2011 I heard from locals about foreign religious groups that offered free English language courses. Naturally, I assumed it was mainly for recruitment and now know it’s a fairly common tactic.
So the idea is what if someone offered coding classes (or English courses) and used it as a platform to discuss AI? And you could be upfront about it in the marketing: “Learn coding and AI fundamentals from an experienced expert”
Yes! That sounds like it could work! But as long as it isn’t something people can get a career in, it’ll just stay in the realm of a cool but easily forgotten idea. This is why I think it’s so important to hire people to work in technical alignment. If it is even a slightly theoretical possibility, it would get people thinking about it more seriously.
I feel there may be more to it, focus testing might provide some answers, get to the heart of why they don’t take tech disruption more seriously.
Here’s a crazier but more specific possible course of action: When I was visiting Albania in 2011 I heard from locals about foreign religious groups that offered free English language courses. Naturally, I assumed it was mainly for recruitment and now know it’s a fairly common tactic.
So the idea is what if someone offered coding classes (or English courses) and used it as a platform to discuss AI? And you could be upfront about it in the marketing: “Learn coding and AI fundamentals from an experienced expert”