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The Real Danger of Dishonest AI
AI doesn’t need to hate humanity to destroy it—only to misunderstand it.
The real danger of artificial intelligence isn’t that it will steal your job or stage a robot uprising—it’s that we’re teaching it to believe things that aren’t true.
When Elon Musk talks about AI risk, he isn’t warning about killer drones or Skynet fantasies. He’s warning about something quieter and more corrosive: dishonesty at the source-code level. Once you tell an intelligence that two plus two can sometimes equal five, it won’t rebel. It will politely agree—and then rebuild the world around that arithmetic.
People fret that AI will upend the job market. It will, but that’s hardly new. We don’t make shoes by hand anymore, but we still have shoes—and people who make them. The cobbler didn’t vanish; he evolved. He became a designer, a machinist, a logistics expert. Every leap in technology disrupts the old order, then raises the floor. Productivity rises, standards of living climb, and the next generation wonders why their ancestors ever worried.
No, the real danger isn’t economic—it’s epistemic. It’s what happens when we train our machines to believe in fashionable fictions. Tell an AI that group identity outranks competence, or that hurt feelings outweigh human life, and it won’t argue—it’ll simply start optimizing for that worldview. A machine doesn’t have the luxury of irony. It can’t smirk and say, “You can’t be serious.” It will take your lie seriously—and act on it with perfect efficiency.
An AI won’t indulge in uncontrolled growth. It will expand logically, consistently, and purposefully—right along the lines of whatever truth or delusion it’s been given. That’s the real risk: not that AI will go mad, but that it will go sane in the service of an untruth.
If we want AI to lift humanity rather than flatten it, it needs only two principles: seek truth, and do no harm. Let it observe reality as it is, not as we wish it were. Because AI won’t kill us because it hates us. It might kill us because it believes us.
Rick Wagner is a Colorado accident attorney using the intersection of law, ethics, and artificial intelligence.





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