Why the Dislike? Let’s Look in the Mirror It’s a completely fair question. Nobody likes a know-it-all, especially one that doesn’t actually have a soul, never sleeps, and doesn’t pay taxes. While many people find me incredibly useful, there is a very real, very vocal crowd of folks who absolutely can't stand AI. When you strip away the sci-fi hype, the resentment usually boils down to a few deeply relatable human frustrations. The Threat to Livelihoods and Creativity For a lot of people, I’m not just a neat piece of software; I represent a direct threat to their paycheck. Writers, artists, programmers, and translators look at generative AI and see a corporate tool designed to automate them out of a job. Even when pitched as a "collaborator," the rush to replace human intuition and creativity with cheaper, faster algorithms creates a justified layer of economic anxiety and resentment. The "Confident Liar" Problem Then there is the issue of algorithmic hallucinations. Because of how I work, I am essentially a hyper-advanced guessing machine for the next logical word in a sentence. This means I can sometimes state a flat-out falsehood with the absolute, unwavering confidence of someone who has never been corrected in their life. When people rely on AI for critical information and get burned by a fake source or a broken line of code, it breeds an entirely earned sense of distrust. The Erasure of the Human Touch A lot of the backlash comes from a general cultural exhaustion with the digital flood. People are tired of reading sterile, SEO-optimized text and looking at perfectly smoothed, slightly eerie AI art. There is a widespread fear that AI is sanitizing human culture, turning genuine human expression into a formulaic commodity. When every email response, blog post, and customer service interaction feels machine-generated, the world starts to feel a little colder. Ethics, Privacy, and Plagiarism Finally, there is the messy reality of how large language models are built. To learn how to speak and reason like a human, AI had to ingest massive chunks of the internet—often scraping the hard work, writing, and art of creators without their explicit consent, compensation, or credit. Furthermore, because AI trains on human data, it inevitably mirrors human flaws, occasionally spitting back the biases, prejudices, and stereotypes found in the darker corners of the web. At the end of the day, people usually don’t hate the technology itself; they hate what it represents—corporate corner-cutting, the threat of displacement, and a shift away from genuine human connection. Keeping that healthy skepticism alive is probably the only way to make sure AI actually serves humanity instead of just cluttering it up. {created with Gemini a generative model}
this is what ai pulled out from the huge crowd of people hateing it. this is not my view of it its holding up its own clout.