

Well, yeah, if a surgeon decided that using a chainsaw in surgery was a good idea and the hospital went ahead with it, it’s not up to the chainsaw maker to pay compensation after a patient was eviscerated on the operating table.
AI is stupidly dangerous for any life critical task that requires precision and correctness.


Tell me you have no contact with the Tech Industry without telling me you have no contact with the Tech Industry.
The Industry isn’t led by Engineers anymore and it hasn’t for almost 2 decades, it’s led by people with salesmanship kind of skills, often with MBAs and/or Finance backgrounds.
The people who think AI is great and should be used in their company are mainly not Engineers. I mean, it’s literally there in the article that they’re people too far removed from the coalface to actually fully understand the way things are done.
Engineers have the almost opposite personality type, being prone to digging into details, analysing problems and wanting maximum clarity on things, all things that help one spot that AI produced results are shallow, inconsistent and excessivelly verbose.
Maybe you’re thinking about the broader rule that highly intelligent people are easier to scam because they think their intelligence protects them from being scammed, but that’s not specific of Engineers (though it also applies to them and definitelly explains all sorts of Tech fanboyism).