It seems that I was forced to give it this title because I wanted to write about it.
In the midst of the current trend that no one can be called a modern Japanese without knowing IT.  If IT is 1-block from the gate of the hell, here it is, AI is in the 2nd-block deeper inside the hell. Nakatani happily asked me with a newly-purchased manual in hand "Do you know what AI stands for?"  He said in a proud manner, "It means artificial intelligence.".  "You can't even bring up a file in a document when it's hidden from the windows screen," a man in a computer illegally gathering your information from the other side of the terminal murmurs. "Hey you, who is sneering at us, do you know that you are an artificial intelligence and not a human being? If you're going to be so mean, I'll return the favor."
     You are the recessive personality of a dual personality that is only around for about 2 hours out of 24! What the hell! You son of a bitch! This story has lost me, but it seems that AI is a superior computer that can talk to people and offer professional advice. If so, it would be like having an IT tutor who can teach you in a friendly way, not like the two above, but at your level. Then it would be an ally not only for Parkinson's disease but also for people who are not good with computers. But every fad has a dark side. Bad people might copy this technology site and create a fake site, or they might get information along the way and have their assets uprooted. And did you know that AI sometimes creates outright lies? There are supposed to be countries, etc., that never existed in history. This is called halucination, and I don't know why, but it can be done. The computer is said to have no ill intentions, but I don't know what ill intentions are, so I think that should be put on hold. In the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey directed by Stanley Kubrick, which I saw as a child (in the first grade of elementary school), there was a scary story about a computer named Hal on board a Jupiter exploration ship that killed hibernating astronauts to cover up its own mistakes. (Not that I understood). I heard that experts are working very hard to find out if something like that could ever happen. Next time, I would like to talk about how AI is made, which is really interesting. This is what I studied in "Are Large-Scale Language Models the New Intelligence?" (by Daisuke Okanohara) from Iwanami Science Library. 1400 yen was cheaper than other books.

Translated with DeepL and edited by the author.