With corporations you often get stuff like the Boeing 737 MAX. It's easy to see how dumb MBA types would not understand the risks and flaws that their mismanagement caused to the design. However, after the first one crashed... what were they thinking? And then a few months later came the next crash. And they still didn't want to stop delivering the obviously faulty planes to their clients, it took the outrage and the regulator to force them to stop delivering them. Actually, even the regulator only acted due to the outrage. What were they thinking?
Since AI issues are not going to be very visible, certainly not on the scale of a plane crash which makes headlines, there'll probably not be outrage and so people will just notice when it's already too late.
With corporations you often get stuff like the Boeing 737 MAX. It's easy to see how dumb MBA types would not understand the risks and flaws that their mismanagement caused to the design. However, after the first one crashed... what were they thinking? And then a few months later came the next crash. And they still didn't want to stop delivering the obviously faulty planes to their clients, it took the outrage and the regulator to force them to stop delivering them. Actually, even the regulator only acted due to the outrage. What were they thinking?
Since AI issues are not going to be very visible, certainly not on the scale of a plane crash which makes headlines, there'll probably not be outrage and so people will just notice when it's already too late.