Internet weighs in on Andrew Tate’s take on Artificial Intelligence: ‘You entirely misunderstand it’
BUCHAREST, ROMANIA: Former kickboxer turned influencer, Andrew Tate aka 'Top G' has recently weighed in on how people misunderstand Artificial Intelligence.
In spite of his controversial views, Tate has managed to garner an impressive fan following on social media. He recently celebrated 8 million followers on X (previously Twitter).
Andrew Tate's take on Artificial Intelligence
On October 22, Andrew Tate reposted a graph by a person named Winsimar Dahilan, where he used a few AI tools to create unique content. However, he wrote, that 80% of his work was done manually.
Sharing the screenshot of the same, Tate wrote, "You entirely misunderstand AI and how it's used by businesses. It doesn't do all the work for you, it adds to your content/products making them 2x better than the competition's. That's what you need to win."
Top G emphasized that human intelligence is way more important than AI, and it just acts as a catalyst in improving content or performance.
You entirely misunderstand AI and how it's used by businesses.
— Andrew Tate (@Cobratate) October 22, 2023
It doesn't do all the work for you, it adds to your content/products making them 2x better than the competition's.
That's what you need to win.https://t.co/hopcAAMksL pic.twitter.com/Y7Aa2Xol1T
Fans react to Andrew Tate's take on Artificial Intelligence
At the time of writing this article, Tate's tweet on X, had nearly 500k views and several comments. While many users said that AI is an important part, others emphasized the importance of manual work.
A user wrote, "Ai is the best thing that has happened to this world," and another user used emojis to remark on Tate's tweet.
A user said, "True you have to learn how to utilize the ai and it will work wonders."
While one user stated, "t adds to your content/products making them 2x better than the competition's," another wrote, "I love using Al to my advantage."
One user commented, "Al can make your job easier but it will never replace pure human thinking."