There's yet another major issue of the centralization of power and knowledge:
> Some worry about the accessibility of AI tools. Traditionally, mathematicians have required little more than intuition, training, and a pen and paper to advance their field. If this slow, deliberative process is no longer valued by society, and particularly by research funders, then mathematics could become an elitist activity, only practiced by select organizations that can afford to work with proprietary AI models.
This can be true of anything LLMs do better than existing options. Because the best LLMs require enormous resources to develop, access to them can be very limited. Right now they are priced for market share. What happens when your small law firm attorney, or self-representation, goes up against a large firm with LLM expertise? Can the kid from the poor high school compete with the kid from the rich school with premium LLM access, in mathematics for example?