• Pennomi@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    It depends on what they mean by AI. I can think of oodles of great uses:

    • An AI-powered adblock that removes all trackers, cookie confirmation popups, those annoying “please subscribe” popups, etc. would be badass. It would be virtually invisible but it would make the internet usable again.
    • A content filter that magically extracts the recipe you’re looking for out of the stupid blog post they write for SEO
    • Or to expand on that, an AI that goes through the page of search engine results and removes the ones that are SEO spam instead of actually useful content
    • An AI that can review at a page or email and determine if it’s a scam would save a TON of people by pointing out suspicious features.
    • Basically anything that requires you to copy data from one context to another is a good use of AI. You could probably have a nice resume-filling feature, for example.

    But yeah, Mozilla will probably just go for a “chat with your browser” feature. Total waste of space.

    • DarkThoughts@kbin.social
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      9 months ago

      All of those could be terrible to be honest, because AI is a data tracking vacuum. An AI adblocker or content filter sounds cool at first, but it would mean it reads and analyzes your data, just like the shit you do with chatbots too. Reading your mails? That’s basically what Google does for years with gmail, that’s why they have such a good spam filter. I agree that a chatbot would be kinda useless though, even if privacy friendly, which in of itself would be great but I just don’t see the use. This could simply be outsourced to a website.