Caitlin Green
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
We don't want to have anything to do with things outside of a product.
So you should never use this in anything about certain identity, anything about things that might be seen as unethical.
There's a lot of things I think people could take this to and it wouldn't work in a sense because people would find it offensive.
So in your example of like gender, things like that, you want to stay clear of offending people.
This could backfire if somebody took this idea and said, hey, I can make this really kind of wrong and use it in a sense of being offensive.
You know, like, for example, somebody told me the other day in San Francisco, there's been a
you know, basically in the lines of if you're looking to work with people, we're not the AI for you or something like that.
And it's kind of gotten a lot of, you know, a lot of people saying this isn't right, because that's something that is very personal and kind of offensive.
So you want to stay clear of things that, you know, going on with the world, we want to steer clear of anything like that.
Just keep it simple.
It's really a simple concept around a product.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You don't you don't want to do that.
And I probably got the wording wrong, but that was the general idea of the article I was reading about this idea of you're turning away people in a way that just doesn't morally seem ethical.
So, yeah.
I think it's okay to tell your consumers when they aren't for you.
I think that's the big takeaway here is I would rather someone say, hey, if you like this, I'm not for you.
And I kind of go on my merry way.
And I think companies would realize that actually helps them because the people that buy their products and like their products are people that are fit for them and that are going to buy it again.