AI with Kyle Daily Update 003

Meta's Proactive Chatbots, AI Helps Couple Conceive After 18 Years, Entry-Level Jobs Shrinking, AI Education for Kids

The skinny on what's happening in AI - straight from the previous live session:

Highlights:

🤖 Meta's Proactive AI Stalkers Are Coming

Discussed at 01:00

Meta is rolling out chatbots that message you first. These "proactive" AI companions will slide into your DMs unprompted, asking about your movie preferences or following up on past conversations. Character AI(the 3rd most-used AI globally) already does this for companionship.

3rd, 5th, 9th are all “companionship” apps

Kyle's take: This is dystopian as hell… Meta's business model is keeping you scrolling for ad revenue - now they'll have AI pulling you back into conversations. There's no age limit either, which is terrifying given what happened with that 14-year-old and Character AI. Meta's response to safety concerns? "We have disclaimers." Brilliant - well, glad you’ve covered your arses at least…

👶 AI Helps Couple Conceive After 18 Years

Discussed at 10:30

A couple with azoospermia (no detectable sperm) finally got pregnant using AI imaging to find hidden sperm cells. The STAR method uses AI to identify sperm that hours of manual microscope searching couldn't locate. Baby due in December. 🥳 

Kyle's take: This is the beautiful side of AI - solving problems humans literally couldn't see. Reminded me of this post where I saw someone use ChatGPT to f

ind a lost contact lens on their floor by having AI highlight it in a photo.

💰 New Industry: Fixing AI's Mistakes

Discussed at 13:50

BBC reports on people making money cleaning up AI-generated content - fixing coding errors, humanising copy, removing obvious AI patterns. Copywriters in India editing US client content to "appear more human." etc.

Kyle's take: This is a short-term patch up job, not a sustainable business. If your entire model is "AI sucks at X," you'll be obsolete in months when AI stops sucking at X.

The real opportunity? Teaching companies to use AI properly so they don't need expensive cleanup consultants. Waaay more sustainable. I’d always want to be ahead of a technology not behind it personally.

🎓 The Entry-Level Job Apocalypse

Discussed at 21:00

Double threat hitting junior workers: hybrid work means less shadowing of seniors, while AI automates the mundane tasks that build professional "muscle memory." So…how do juniors learn?

 Kyle's take: This is the slow, insidious destruction I've been warning about. KPMG already cutting graduate programs explicitly due to AI. New graduates can't learn by watching experienced colleagues (because of remote work) or doing repetitive tasks (AI automation does it now).

How do you develop the expertise and discernment to spot AI mistakes if you never learned the fundamentals? The pyramid is collapsing from the bottom.

📚 Teachers Save 6 Weeks Per Year With AI

Discussed at 25:50

Gallup study shows 60% of teachers use AI tools, with weekly users saving 6 hours per week on lesson prep and grading. That's 6 weeks annually they can spend actually teaching instead of admin drudgery.

Kyle's take: This is exactly how AI should work - eliminating the bollocks so humans can focus on what matters. Teachers working evenings and weekends on unpaid prep is mental. If AI gives them their lives back whilst improving lesson quality, that's a massive win for education.

Related Member Question: "How should schools bring in AI and how should kids use it?"

Kyle's For schools: Use AI for lesson prep, grading, admin - give teachers their evenings back.

For kids: It's like having a personal tutor that was previously only available to the wealthy. But guidance is crucial - AI can make smart, hardworking people more productive, or make lazy people even lazier.

Adults need good AI habits before they can teach kids proper usage.

🏥 UK Medical AI: Slow and Steady

Member Question from Adnan

Adnan asked about medical AI implementation in the UK NHS system.

Kyle's take: Imaging specialists should be worried - AI is already better at radiology. But the NHS moves at snail's pace, plus doctor unions will fight this. If you're a medical student, avoid imaging, stick to surgery or hospital medicine. If you're already a consultant, you're probably safe for years. My hope? That saving lives takes precedence over saving jobs, but we'll see.

This question was discussed at 43:00 during today's live session.

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