BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  5 reasons why AI apocalypse might be closer than you think
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Tue, 17 Feb 2026 11:22:45 -0500
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'The world is in peril' - 5 reasons why the AI apocalypse might be closer
than you think

By Eric Hal Schwartz published 23 hours ago

AI is causing problems and there are warning signs it's going to get worse

There's been an endless parade of proclamations over the last few years about
an AI golden age. Developers proclaim a new industrial revolution and
executives promise frictionless productivity and amazing breakthroughs
accelerated by machine intelligence. Every new product seems to boast of its AI
capability, no matter how unnecessary.

But that golden sheen has a darker edge. There are more indications that the
issues around AI technology are not a small matter to be fixed in the next
update, but a persistent, unavoidable element of the technology and its
deployment. Some of the concerns are born out of myths about AI, but that
doesn't mean that there's nothing to worry about. Even if the technology isn't
scary, how people use it can be plenty frightening. And solutions offered by
the biggest proponents of AI solutions often seem likely to make things worse.

There have been events in the past few months that have hinted at something
more destabilizing. None of them guarantees catastrophe on their own, but they
don't evoke the optimism the fans of AI would like us to feel. They sketch a
picture of a technology accelerating faster than the structures meant to guide
it. If the apocalypse ever comes courtesy of artificial intelligence, they may
be what we look back at as the first moments.

1. AI safety experts flee

This month, the head of AI safety research at Anthropic resigned and did so
loudly. In a public statement, he warned that "the world is in peril" and
questioned whether core values were still steering the company's decisions. A
senior figure whose job was to think about the long term and how increasingly
capable systems might go wrong decided it was impossible to keep going. His
departure followed a string of other exits across the industry, including
founders and senior staff at xAI and other high-profile labs. The pattern has
been difficult to ignore.

Resignations happen in tech all the time, of course, but these departures have
come wrapped in moral concern. They have been accompanied by essays and
interviews that describe internal debates about safety standards, competitive
pressure, and whether the race to build more powerful models is outpacing the
ability to control them. When the people tasked with installing the brakes
begin stepping away from the vehicle, it suggests that the car may be
accelerating in ways even insiders find troubling.

AI companies are building systems that will shape economies, education, media,
and possibly warfare. If their own safety leaders feel compelled to warn that
the world is veering into dangerous territory, that warning deserves more than
a shrug.

2. Deepfake dangers

It's hard to argue there's an issue in AI safety when regulators in the United
Kingdom and elsewhere find credible evidence of horrific misuse of AI like
reports that Grok on X had generated sexually explicit and abusive imagery,
including deepfake content involving minors.

Not that deepfakes are new, but now, with the right prompts and a few minutes
of patience, users can produce fabricated images that would have required
significant technical expertise just a few years ago. Victims have little
recourse once manipulated images spread across the internet's memory.

From an apocalyptic perspective, this is not about a single scandal. It is
about erosion. Trust in visual evidence was already fragile. Now it is
cracking. If any image can be plausibly dismissed as synthetic and any person
can be digitally placed into compromising situations, the shared factual ground
beneath public discourse begins to dissolve. The hopeful counterpoint is that
regulators are paying attention and that platform operators are being forced to
confront misuse. Stronger safeguards, better detection tools, and clearer legal
standards could blunt the worst outcomes, but that won't undo the damage
already done.

3. Real world hallucinations

For years, most AI failures lived on screens, but that boundary is fading as AI
systems are starting to help steer cars, coordinate warehouse robots, and guide
drones. They interpret sensor data and make split-second decisions in the
physical world. And security researchers have been warning that these systems
are surprisingly easy to trick.

Studies have demonstrated that subtle environmental changes, altered road
signs, strategically placed stickers, or misleading text can cause AI vision
systems to misclassify objects. In a lab, that might mean a stop sign
interpreted as a speed limit sign. On a busy road, it could mean something far
worse. Malicious actors could be an emerging threat. The more infrastructure
depends on AI decision-making, the more attractive it becomes as a target.

The apocalyptic imagination leaps quickly from there. Ideally, awareness of
these weaknesses will drive investment in robust security practices before
autonomous systems become ubiquitous. But, if deployment outruns safety, we
could all learn some painful lessons in real time

4. Chatbots get a sales team

OpenAI began rolling out advertising within ChatGPT recently, and the response
has been mixed, to say the least. A senior OpenAI researcher resigning publicly
and arguing that ad-driven AI products risk drifting toward user manipulation
probably didn't help calm matters. When a system that knows your fears,
ambitions, and habits also carries commercial incentives, the lines between
assistance and persuasion blur.

Social media platforms once promised simple connections and information
sharing, but their ad-based business models shaped design choices that
maximized engagement, sometimes at the cost of user well-being. An AI assistant
embedded with advertising could face similar pressures. Subtle prioritization
of certain answers. Nudges that align with sponsor interests. Recommendations
calibrated not only for relevance but for revenue.

To be fair, advertising does not automatically corrupt a product. Clear
labeling, strict firewalls between monetization and core model behavior, and
regulatory oversight could prevent worst-case scenarios. Still, that
resignation means there's real, unresolved tension in that regard.

5. A growing catalogue of mishaps

There is a simple accumulation of evidence of problems with AI. Between
November 2025 and January 2026, the AI Incident Database logged 108 new
incidents. Each entry documents a failure, misuse, or unintended consequence
tied to AI systems. Many cases may be minor, but every report of AI used fraud
or dispensing dangerous advice adds up.

Acceleration is what matters here. AI tools are popping up everywhere, and so
the number of problems multiplies. Perhaps the uptick in reported incidents is
simply a sign of better tracking rather than worsening performance, but it's
doubtful that accounts for everything. A still relatively new technology has a
lot of harm to its name.

Apocalypse is a loaded word evoking images of collapse and finality. AI may not
be at that point and might never reach it, but it's undeniably causing a lot of
turbulence. Catastrophe is not inevitable, but complacency would be a mistake.
It might not be the end of the world, but AI can certainly make it feel that
way.


https://www.techradar.com/ai-platforms-assistants/the-world-is-in-peril-5-reaso
ns-why-the-ai-apocalypse-might-be-closer-than-you-think

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