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AI Technology A Gift & A Curse

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Duration:
19m
Broadcast on:
03 Jul 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

(upbeat music) - It's problems. - You know. - Is it just audio visual as well? - Not only audio, this one, but here it is. Tell me what you think. - Oh, I was actually curious, but a man sent in a video of you rapping on the channel back in the day from time ago. I think it was welcome back, welcome back everybody to the Express Truth Podcast on YouTube. And we have a very special guest in the building tonight. Is there a one and only ventral sea in it? - You're a man. - Thank you, man. It's all blessed, man. It's all blessed. - The center, I just want to say. - This is cool. - I'm meant to be Stephen, listen. - Correct the man if he's wrong, but am I ratting saying, you got a new track drop in this week in it? - Oh, yeah. Now, that guy-- - It's a lot of an accent. That's the only thing that-- - I think he's from Leeds. - Well, no, the accents I can hear sounds like on the accent, you don't sound like-- - Oh, is that not Leeds? - Nah, that don't sound like Leeds. - Okay, 'cause if he gets the accent right, he's on to certain, you know? - 100%. That sounds proper still. - It's running. - Welcome, bro. I was actually curious, but a man sent in a video of you rapping on the channel back in the day from time ago. - I think it was, but I've lost it now. - All right, he's gonna say J-D-Z in a second. I say J-D-Z in the exact same way. How the hell does the AI know that? - Wait, Stephen, was it J-D-Z? - You know, I might have been that one actually. - J-D-Z. - Like, he's got the mannerisms down to a T still, but the voice ain't right. Well, imagine when the voice is right that there could have been saying anything. - This is the, that's the scary thing. - It's very scary. - You know what they do as well with this AI toys. This is how powerful and dangerous this AI tool is. Here's an example. So if you was to use that same program, this is gonna be normal for most people, but before in the olden days, we're not what lads, you'd go onto a website and you would just type in, okay, if you needed to login or create an account, you would just login. Nowadays, it comes up old. You wanna login as on your Facebook, on your Twitter, your TikTok, you wanna use a Google account. So as soon as you use, let's say your Google account, your Google account is linked to Google, isn't it? - Yeah. - And to Play Store and to everything else and to all of the other profiles. So as soon as you say, yep, I'm gonna login as that, as let's say, CFR network, I hit enter. Now I'm in this portal to be able to create the content. As soon as I've clicked enter, within a click of my finger, it's now in the whole of that network, it's looking at all of the emails, it's looking at all of the videos, pictures, how, what messages I've sent, deleted messages, interactions. Now it's going, okay, well, what YouTube account is associated to, then it's gonna go through all of the YouTube content, then it's gonna pick the voice, this is the voice, this is gonna search blankly for the voice. Oh, I've got an image as well. I'm gonna want the image everywhere that's online and available and they clear all of that information. Boom. That's how you get the amount of reasons. That's how you get the information. - Yeah, man. Yeah, man. It's mental and they can, you gotta remember, you know, they can do AI now, where they can actually make it look like you said it yourself, they could, a man could have a video, you know, of me talking and it's not even me. The AI thing's scary, man. And you know why, another thing, I'm gonna tell everybody, you know, the issues I've had with AI. I've definitely regressed, you know, since using AI, you know, I'm telling you straight off regressed because if you go to write a paragraph, yeah, you're like, hold on a second. Do I need to add that in there? Do I need to do that? You're like, yo, these things used to be, I used to, I'd write a paragraph and not even think about it. I'm doing the punctuation without even thinking about it. Now I'm like, I'll tell you what happened to me, actually, the other day. There was a word I was spelling over and you know, I forgot how to spell it. - It happens to me, Mark. - I forgot, I'm talking, I had to write it down. No, a man was telling me that he's doing a uni project and he's like, can you write a sentence and sign it for this project? Like, he had to get other people to do it. And Noble, I forgot how to spell a particular word in the sentence. And that's because I'll usually, if you're on your phone, it does everything for you. It corrects everything. It's even got to the stage now. I got Grammarly, you know what Grammarly is. - Yeah, yeah, yeah. - I got Grammarly so I can like talk, I can dictate out a paragraph in my notes. Copy that paragraph, pull it into Grammarly and Grammarly fixes the whole thing. - Indeed. - So then all I got to do is pull it into Grammarly, it fixes the whole thing and then I can copy and paste it. - Authors use that, that software a lot. - It is absolutely mental what you can now do online and not even just online, just in general. It is crazy and a lot of us don't see what we transition in right now. We transition in right now and on the other side of this, how long do you think it's going to be until that Alexa isn't just a little speaker. It's actually now a thing, a dolly, a dolly that you put on the side. Okay, now it's not a dolly anymore, now it's something that runs around on wheels, around the house. Now it's not on wheels anymore, it's actually a walking thing. - Yeah, man. - Before you know it, it's I-robot novel. - Musk is talking his thing, right? Is he most talking about that, something them dolls and AI, AI, robot things. - Yeah man, they're getting them ready as we speak, man. Suit, before you know it, it's going to not be an Alexa in a man's house. It's going to be a full blown thing. - Yeah, yeah, that you do. And I'm probably bigger than Megan. It's going to be like I-robot eventually 'cause that Alexa is the first stages of that. - Yes. - It's the phases. - I remember AI learned a lot of people don't understand, is AI learns who you are as well. Learn she patterns, it learns. My thing's indeed, man, you can, my AI is at the level now. I can actually buy something on Amazon talking to the Alexa. I can actually buy something on there. Everything's linked, your cards linked to it. - Yes. - Yeah, everything's linked to it. Every single thing is linked to it. So you gotta think, as we stand right now, there is no privacy. So, the only privacy that you get right now is the privacy that you forcibly, you see what I'm saying? - Up there, man. - Yeah, that stuff. Outside of that, there's no privacy on the thing, you spend your money on, you can try and live off the grid, it's damn near impossible in the UK. Think you spend your money. Look at the advertising now. I've seen an advert the other day, 'cause you've got the, is it the euros that's going on now? - Yeah, yeah, yeah. - So you've got the euros going on. And as we know, when the euros are going on, adverts go crazy. So, I've seen an advert, and it was a genius advert, Noble. So, they're in a shop, and the guys, one guy's paying on a card, and he's trying to pay, and as he's trying to pay, the card keeps, ah, put it back in again, we need to do it again. Ah, put it back in, sometimes it messes around, and the advert switches to a different scene, and there's a man, and he just backs at his phone and pays on Apple Pay, and walks away, and you know what, the voice in the advert says, don't get stuck in queues this summer, use Apple Pay. So, I'm looking, and I'm like, why that's true, you know, 'cause the Apple Pay is seamless. You go into the shop, you just literally put your phone by it, boom, click, and you're gone. But how much people will see that advert, and say, nah, I need to set up my Apple Pay, how much people will see that, who haven't set up Apple Pay, who now say, why that's true, you know, allow the long thing, Apple Pay. - Okay, so two things. So, you've got the Apple Pay, and then there's the Google version of it, I don't know what the hell that's for. - G-Pay, G-Pay, yeah, that's it, right? So again, same process, you load the thing up, blah, blah, blah, and you just tap your phone, right? - Yeah. - Now, a lot of people, pardon self, who have mobile phones today, outside of the Apple Crew, 'cause I rarely see Apple Crew with this, but they'll have to like the case, you know, the little level case, and you've got a little slot for your cards and all that shit. - Yeah. So, what's the difference? You just pull your card out, and you tap the card the same way you tap your phone. - That's true, but what it means, mobile is you don't actually need your card, all you need is your phone. - Okay. - No one leaves their house without their phone, but I know plenty of people that leave their house without their card. - Very true. - So what it means is, it's a one-stop shot. People don't see it. - No, I don't see it. - Yeah, what they're doing now, this phone, this is all you need. This is your, it's player one, player two business. This is your presence in the world. If you're not, there'll be times if you're not on WhatsApp for a few days. People think something's wrong with you. Like that, and look, I'll tell you another story. 2010, I'm coming through customs back to the UK. I'm coming through customs back to the UK. And I'm on the plane now. I'm coming from New York, coming back to the UK. I'm on the plane and I'm with a London brother, who's on the plane with me. This London brother lives in London. We're flying back to Heathrow. So we just chatting and moments saying, "Yo, as I leave this place, I'm gone. I'm straight through customs. I'm gone." And I remember for months before that, I had been in the debate, 'cause this is the time they were rolling out the chips in the passport. And I had been in the debate. You're mad, they're not chipping writing. You're crazy, they're gonna put a chip in my arm and now you're crazy, they're not chipping my passport. I'll just use that one. Even when they put, if they have, if you have to do it, I just won't go nowhere. I'm talking like that. Snowball, you see as I got into the queue and I seen that brother went straight through. No, but I said I need that chip immediately in my passport because you see when I'm queuing in that big old queue, the place is like, I seen the London guy walk straight through, I said, "Hold on, what's going on?" My man's gone straight through. I'm like, "I'm waiting." I'm like, "Just because I ain't got that chip, I'm waiting here." And then I remember my dad was like, "Mark, you're not involved in no crime or no, not any." They can put the chip in your passport because you're not hiding from more one and then when I heard them words, I was like, "That's true, you know." They can keep everything because there's never going to be a point where me and them are sitting down to discuss anything. So, if I'm a man who's, I know you're the same as me, no, but there is, there is a time when you look in your city. So, are you not going to give us any privacy at all? (laughs) Like, what the hell, man? - I mean, whilst we've been talking and I don't think I'll be able to find it, but at the, towards the end of the enemy of the state with Will Smith and if people haven't watched that movie, Will, Peep, that, it's all, it's predictive programming in a sense. It came out in 1998 and that towards the end, there's a geezer and it's a senator and he says, "The only privacy that you're going to have "is in your head." We want to know everything bars, everything. We got satellites, you know, thousands of feet up in the air that can pinpoint exactly where you are. Every vehicle, post, 1990, three or four, or has a GPS system automatically on that vehicle, a tracking facility. No matter how, if it's your Ford to your prestigious, to your supercut, they've all got that capability for that vehicle to be tracked. - And there's no black and no more as well. - No, no, no, blacking about our, this, a crash happened in the seven, they can even see if he was on your phone at the time of the crash. They can even see if he was on your phone. - Yep, yep. - And another thing, not people that know it's in this, but I'll tell you right now, the new Wi-Fi will be satellite based, all of it. So, what I mean by that is, I know you've seen Tesla's Wi-Fi, haven't you? Have you seen Starlink? - Yeah. - Okay, Starlink are the ones who are using the satellites currently. However, the next phase of Starlink will be open to normal networks. - Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. - So, let's say like say, O2, they'll be able to spend money to use that satellite. So Tesla won't have the monopoly on it no more. They'll have to start selling that other companies can use the satellite too. What that's going to mean normal is that Wi-Fi will be satellite based. What that will now mean is that if you're connected to that via your device, the information that your average 4G, 5G tower gives out, the satellite can give out way more info than that. It can actually give you pinpoint precision to where that device is. - Exactly. - And what else, think about it normal. Historically, satellites have been the thing that are the most advanced, think about it, all them satellites up there. What do you think they're going to do? They're going to use that and start tapping into other things. That's what I say. Now, right now, moving forward in humanity, most pointless time in history to be a criminal. They're going to be able to catch you in so many ways. - Any of you are going to make sense? - Mark, Mark, Mark, Mark. Excellent, excellent, excellent. And like you did that because I heard on the radio yesterday on BBC WM, which is slowly but surely declining as a viable means of-- - Yeah, long time I'm surprised you're still listening. - I don't listen for the traffic reports now and then when Molly Green comes on, outside of that. - Well, Mark, I do learn man, is he still active? - I do learn. - Yeah. - He's transition sibling. - Oh, damn. - Yeah, my mum was a legend back in the day. - Of course, man. - Morning, but Brom, morning radio, legend man, I do learn man. - Don't know the thing, wow, she don't know the thing. But yeah, so they had something on. And again, this is all synchronic, man, all synchronic, because I was talking about the state of play and how things are in Brom, versus how we were growing up and stuff, and how criminality was. I mean, a snapshot for the people who were quite young who were gonna be listening live on the replay, like CCTV television in Birmingham, in the streets and in the shops was crap. They had VHS tapes that would record this information and they would just record, record, record, record until you couldn't record on the tape anymore. So when someone tried to view the set footage, it was poor, poor quality, it was terrible quality. So lots of crimes would take place in Birmingham, street rubbers, tombs, handbags, all of that kind of stuff. And there was no video footage to catch these people unless they were caught in the process of committing that crime. You know what I mean? It's not going down. Things have changed now. It's four 5K cameras in all these business. AI, facial, recognition. - 8K, normal. - Oh shit, 8K, right. 8K, everyone has a pocket computer in their hand now when we were growing up. There was no, if you had a mobile phone, you didn't even have a camera on it until like the 90s, late, late 90s, early 1000s and stuff. You just had a phone? So the ability to do these low level street crimes was able to be done there then, but now two teenagers, how old were they? I didn't say how old they were, but they tried to rub some school child in town, Brom Town Center for his mobile phone mark. I'm like people still doing that kind of stuff with all of the EMI numbers and the tracking technology. - Yeah, you can block the phone and make it, a phone is just hardware now. The software of a phone is what drives the phone forward. - Exactly. - So that's what controls the phone, the software. Historically, the hardware was what controls the phone. Now it's the software, so to steal a phone might be the most pointless task because let's say for conversation say, this phone what I've got in my hand right now was stolen from me. I would only need to get to a computer. Matter of fact, I'd only need to get to another phone. - Yes. - And by the time I do that, I can go on to my iCloud and block that device. Matter of fact, the person who's got the phone, I can put it into theft mode. So it comes up, we've got theft mode on iPhones. So a message will come up and say, this phone is being tracked or whatever, to the man has to all dash it and leave it. It's the most pointless thing to rub a phone right now. Like a laptop and all these Apple products and that's why it's so difficult to leave their ecosystem because everything's linked, your iPad, your iWatch, your phone, your computer, your laptop is all linked. So if certain did go missing, you just got to go to another device and put it in theft mode. - That's dope that is. I want to be fair. - Yeah, man. - If I'm enjoying to cut some shit, something like that, goog, goog. I've got anything like that. That's good phone is that's what I'm saying is