№23916[Quote]
>>23915 (OP)No, I’m the master, AI is only an assistant, I decide everything myself, and delegate tasks with clear instructions
№23917[Quote]
>>23916thats what everyone thinks until they realize their GPS has been making all their navigation decisions for years and they can't read a paper map anymore
№23923[Quote]
>>23917sea of thieves taught me how to use a map ill be fine kek
№23926[Quote]
A good answer depends on the tone you want, but here are a few solid ways to respond—each makes you sound thoughtful without being preachy.
Balanced / conversational
> “I think we already are, but mostly in small, low-stakes ways. The real question isn’t whether AI makes decisions, but who’s responsible when its recommendations become the default.”
Slightly skeptical
> “We’re not really outsourcing decisions—we’re outsourcing *judgment shortcuts*. Humans still sign off, but we’re getting lazier about questioning the output.”
Cautiously optimistic
> “Yes, but that’s not automatically bad. We’ve always delegated decisions to tools—calculators, GPS, spreadsheets. The risk is when we stop understanding *why* the tool says what it says.”
More philosophical
> “Maybe what’s changing isn’t decision-making, but accountability. When an AI suggests something, it creates a gray zone where no one feels fully responsible.”
Short and punchy
> “We’re outsourcing choices, not responsibility—at least that’s what we tell ourselves.”
If you want, tell me who asked (friend, coworker, class discussion, online debate) and how confrontational or casual you want to sound, and I can tailor it perfectly.
№23938[Quote]
Just use it to find information more efficiently. Were you outsourcing thinking to a search engine? Not really it's more like memory and patience.
№24150[Quote]
>>23916but human's are a bad master
№24151[Quote]
>>23915 (OP)You can't outsource shit to AI
Try it and you will end up with some failure. The only thing it can do to help you is digest reddit posts and stackoverflow articles without dying of cringe