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Price: $21.49
(as of Jan 16,2025 21:17:41 UTC – Details)
Customers say
Customers find the book easy to read and insightful. It provides a clear explanation of the dangers of AI and its impact on the global economy. The content is informative and accurate, offering readers a good understanding of the subject matter.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Another Book in Which Jim Rickards Tells You Exactly What You Need to Know
Okay, I admit. I’ve been reading Jim Rickards books since Currency Wars inn 2010. He has written about money and “the death of money.” About war games, the pandemic, international trade, gold (and more gold), and much more. And now he tackles GBT (Generative Pre-trained Transformer). Essentially, these are computer models that learn how to do things, only at speed-of-electrons faster than human wet-ware.So far, so good. If you’re into coding and this level of tech, you’ll love the book. It’s eye-candy. And if you’re barely fluent in this new lingo, read it anyhow because you’ll learn something and I mean important.Here’s my takeaway: GBT takes much decision-making out of human hands, and places the work inside a computer system. (trading the stock market, for example.) And if one or two or a few, or even a whole lot of people do this, it’s a thing and won’t change the world too much. But what happens with rapid growth towards widespread adoption? You know, the “everybody is doing it” approach. Well, if everybody is doing it, then everybody’s systems will make much the same sort of decisions, only much faster. That’s because, in many scenarios, many people’s systems “learned” their decision-tree processes in much the same way. And at this point, all the decision-steps are happening very fast, moving towards same or very similar outcomes. Which means that you can get flash-moves up or down. As in, eg, a market meltup or a market meltdown. And it’s all happening outside of the time frame of human judgment. That is, the systems move so rapidly that there’s no time for human wisdom to look at things and say, “Hey, something’s out of whack here. Don’t make that move.”Nope… By the time the human eyeballs and brain cells begin to intervene, the damage may be done. And in this sense, Rickards gives us all a serious lesson of caution about where this new GPT idea can go. Plus, this is before the proverbial Bad Actors (market scammers, criminals, state-level players like military orgs) do their nefarious thing.I can’t restate the entire book here. There’s all of the foregoing, and much, much more. In this sense, the book is definitely worth a read, and will offer plenty of thinking. Plus, check out the end-notes, which are deeply thorough and astonishing in breadth. Definitely a thoughtful, well-written, provoking tome. Add this one to your Jim Rickards library.
An Intelligent, Honest Page-Turner
Iâve read a lot of Jim Rickardsâ work, yet this book is a surprise. The subtitle speaks of a âthreatâ â which makes the book sound like a downer but in fact it reads like an exhilarating back-and-forth between Rickards and AI that spans the world from China to the Situation Room to the NYSE to an American home.Rickards brings a huge amount of learning to the book (the âSelected Sourcesâ list at the end of the book runs 24 pages!) spanning Homer, Aristotle, Poe, Heidegger, Alan Greenspan, Andy Warhol, Marshall McLuhan, Kissinger, Kubrick and a dazzling number of articles, books and academic papers Iâd never have time to read. Yet all of the book is very readable, a page-turner.The book is full of observations like âWhen a robot trains on propaganda, it repeats propagandaâ and âShowing that a deep learning machine is not as successful at innovation as a child makes a powerful case for excluding such machines entirely.â Rickards warns: âNever anthropomorphize the math.âYet Rickards says AI is here to stay. My favorite sections of the book are the deep dives into history, computer âhallucinationsâ (or âconfabulationsâ as Rickards clarifies) and even an excellent exploration of art beginning with Marcel Duchamp (Jim has long advised fine art as an investment and he knows his stuff).And of course Rickardsâ advice about how to get and keep your money is useful for everyone from the beginning investor to someone rich enough to need to put their wealth in many different places (and Jim knows those places).Last of all, this is a book written with clarity and honesty. For all his intelligence, Rickards never speaks down to his readers. He is patient and they will learn a lot about AI, the world and money. And Jim is humble enough to end with âIf there are any mistakes in this book, theyâre on me.â If there are mistakes in this book, I didnât see them. This book is a must-read at the right time.
The limitation of AI
Great explanation on how AI could potentially affect our financial and humanity destiny
This is an enlightening read
Being in technology I was particularly interested to see how a geopolitical and economic commentator would approach this subject, the answer is in my opinion is extremely well! The theme of this book is not doom and gloom about AI and that it will destroy the world, far from it! The narrative is consistent and from a technology perspective frighteningly accurate as to what could happen with our increased use of AI tools and what to look out for. Thereâs enough information in this book for those who have a good grasp of AI and its extremely informative for those that are less familiar with something thats here to stay.
Rickards Delivering the Truth Again!
This is an outstanding and easy to read book that truly opened my eyes to the significant risks AI poses within financial markets. It delves into how AI-driven systems, such as algorithmic trading and automated investment strategies, can create unexpected volatility and instability. Jim Rickards does an excellent job of explaining these dangers and highlighting the potential for AI to disrupt traditional market dynamics. Alongside this, the book offers practical advice on how to safeguard and preserve wealth, making it a crucial read for anyone concerned about the future of investing in an increasingly automated world.
James Rickards is by far best author, i read all his books and this one doesn’t disappoint!