

Emmanuel Benjamin
848 posts

@EmmanuelBe61770
lost old account FOREX TRADER || Born to win || VIDEOGRAPHER 📷






there is a difference between using ai to help us make decisions and allowing ai companies to make decisions for us. i think that line is becoming increasingly important. every day, ai systems are becoming more involved in how information is filtered, how content is ranked, how claims are evaluated, and how conclusions are reached. the technology is improving fast. but there is a question sitting underneath all of it: who gets to decide what is true? who gets to decide what happened? who gets to decide which interpretation wins when people disagree? i don't think those decisions should quietly move into the hands of a few ai labs. because every model reflects choices. what data was used. what rules were applied. what perspectives were prioritized. what assumptions were built into the system. when judgment becomes centralized, trust becomes centralized too. that's why i find the idea of adjudication so important. not because ai should replace human decision-making. but because the systems making important judgments should remain transparent, contestable, and open to challenge. the more i learn about @GenLayer, the more i see it addressing this exact problem. instead of asking people to trust a single model's answer, it explores how multiple independent validators can reason through information and reach outcomes collectively. because the goal of the agentic era shouldn't be to surrender judgment to machines. it should be to build systems where no single actor gets to own judgment in the first place. ai can help us decide. but we should never give away our right to decide. genM!

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