Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple, said that artificial intelligence systems often fail to answer questions directly and lack the emotional understanding he expects from technology, reports N1 Zagreb.
Wozniak expressed concerns about artificial intelligence as the technology becomes increasingly embedded in everyday life, warning that it may not yet provide the reliability and human understanding that people expect.
Appearing on "Fox Business," he talked about how artificial intelligence is developing and where, in his opinion, it is lagging behind despite rapid progress in the technology industry.
Wozniak, who helped build the earliest Apple computers and shaped the personal computing revolution, bases his skepticism on the importance of human reasoning and emotional awareness, arguing that technology should reflect real understanding, not just well-formulated answers.
"I want to know that a human being like me thinks, knows what I might feel and understands emotions and all that," Wozniak said.
Based on his own experience testing AI tools, Wozniak said that systems often fail to directly answer questions, instead offering broad or unrelated information that misses the real needs of users.
"I want that kind of reliable content every time. I'm not a fan of artificial intelligence," Wozniak concluded.
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