We've had about a century now of science-fiction literature hyping up AI as a higher intelligence that is based solely on some ill-defined yet universal system of "logic" and is therefore not prone to human flaws such as pride, hate, envy, lust, etc. Now it has become extremely apparent that was always an unsubstantiated assumption but its too late because there are billions of people primed to never question the machine.
Aside from all the stories where AI does exactly what it was told to instead of what the creators meant? Apart form them, never underestimate British humour's ability to contradict narratives of competence*:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BxWQo_vZgR8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0mfvPHCVMp0
* artificial, political, workplace, nothing is beyond mockery
In Dune we never learned what exactly went down in the butlerian jihad. Perhaps it was worse than idiocracy and the galaxy became monumentally stupid for an eon or two, rather than a bloodthirsty Terminator scenario.
I really don’t think that’s what’s going on here.
People interact with AI, talking to it like a human. Of course they start to believe it’s rational like a human.
LLM does all of the entry level tasks better than the students. Partially because the answers are in the training set, and partially because it has gotten that good now. Hard not to start to believe it is “competent”.
I personally have had a real hard time getting traction talking about making sure the way we assess AI is not based on material it has trained on. YMMV as always, but I think the large training corpus contributes to the (unreasonably) high level of faith in the machine.