Kelly Corrigan
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
If impartial, unbiased Wobot was talking to me and my brothers and my parents, maybe it could help me by saying, here's what your brother's really mad about from that vacation in 1978.
The only tension I felt was like, was it to the greater good that there was an AI that could walk you through some of your cognitive distortions at two in the morning?
Or is it important in some way that we learn how to do that moment alone?
I think at the end of the day, maybe the most important takeaway from talking to Alison is a process point.
It's like, how are you evaluating AI options that are going to come across your desk?
Like, could we be smarter consumers and advisors to one another as options become available?
I wonder if AI is going to be a great new receptacle for very scary thoughts like, I tried cocaine.
Or my boyfriend wants to try choking.
Oh, yeah.
That there's no way my children are going to come to me with that.
And they never would have.
Yes.
But will they come to you?
And then what is the responsibility of a company who's in that conversation?
And I think we're getting smarter through Allison's talk and the talks that are coming up about how we evaluate what questions would we ask of the developer and the designer and the company?
that's offering us these certain products, how would we know who to work with and who to let in?
Because we begin the interaction.
We say yes to something and it enters our home.
And I think it's already been clear that we were asleep when we let social media enter our lives.
And I think many people were asleep when they let something like