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My personal mental image for AI agents is Mr Meeseeks.
Per Wikipedia:
> Meeseeks are a powder-blue-skinned species of humanoids (each of whom is named "Mr. Meeseeks") who are created to serve a single purpose which they will go to any length to fulfill. Each brought to life by a "Meeseeks Box", they typically live for no more than a few hours in a constant state of pain, vanishing upon completing their assigned task so as to end their own existence and thereby end their suffering; as such, the longer an individual Meeseeks remains alive, the more insane and unhinged they become.
Any idea on who is behind this group? It has an extensive list of institutional partners mostly based in Europe so it must have gained traction somehow. And yet the two key contacts listed on the websites do not seem to have extensive experience in this field. One is a student and the other's main achievement seems to be founding another AI advocacy group.
My gut feeling is this is just another UK based quango — non governmental in name only and exists mostly to push elite agenda.
And a narrative that makes AI seem friendly and helpful.
These CEOs who keep lying about AI taking jobs need to be silenced with facts about AI impact on jobs (mostly neglible, oddly related to the ROI problem. If AI = job replacement that might be a kind of ROI, right ?)
And the hysterics around "needing to stop AI" because "its moving too fast" wut? Totally fake.
AI can't provide valid formatted XML in some cases, gets caught in useless loops in others, etc.
That only works if the mascot is people’s primary association with the brand, and they have some initially positive experiences with the brand. Most people see AI as suspicious, if not outright sinister. Trying to put a cute fuzzy face on something like that makes it seem more suspicious ands sinister, not less.
Been through this exact cycle at two companies now — mascot/icon redesign gets floated whenever trust metrics dip, and it never moves the needle. People's distrust comes from opaque decisions and job impact, not the logo. Cute icons just read as "we know you're mad, please don't be."
A few have been attempted. Mostly by Microsoft and subsidiaries, from GitHub to Mojang. None have caught on. Closest is GitHub's logo which is getting increasingly animated. But dedicated mascots a la Microsoft's Mico have gone absolutely nowhere.
Neither pole is well supported. The labor econ literature (Acemoglu's work on automation exposure, say) suggests displacement is real but concentrated and slow, not the binary "fine" or "everyone's replaced" framing. Stock photo sites just aren't equipped to communicate that nuance either way.
Mascot cost us zero jobs saved. We swapped 2 support reps for an AI bot last year, real savings, real layoffs, no cute logo involved. Branding won't change what happens on the P&L, that's the part nobody wants to look at.
>These AI images also add to the public mistrust of AI, a growing problem for innovation in a field that is sometimes seen as biased, opaque and extractive.
Oh my, how would anyone ever have gotten that impression?!
I agree that existing images have absolutely terrible ways of bringing in baggage about how these machines work or could work.
The problem is that anything I can think of that would give a true represenation is either super abstract or super detailed and difficult for layperson to understand. Im thinking representations of neural network weights between layers, softmax functions etc.
The issue is that so many ways of doing it here are just bad. Imagery of screens, computer chips, or servers? Normal software runs on chips, but these are qualitatively different to normal software, hence the need for this whole thing. Same goes for images of ones and zeroes, or computer code (a particularly bad offender, given that one major thing that makes them so strange is that they aren't authored or told how to behave in any comprehensible sense)
Images of robots conjure thoughts of magical robots from sci-fi movies, which typically don't remotely work like llms (movie robots have a strong focus on logic and maths, where LLMs are creatures of words and feelings and philosophy)
Brains and people-related imagery fail by bringing ideas of humanity and artifical minds, where these are incredibly complex prediction machines. Some argue perhaps rightly whether humans ourselves are prediction machines, but I think its important not to mix the two ideas because the failure modes of AI are so fundamentally alien and new, and thoughts that these things are the same as smart humans is where problems around oversight and trust get really worrying (confidently speaking with perfect grammar and diction about complicated topics but being confused about basic physics of everyday objects, being easily persuadable to just about any viewpoint and will happily drop everything they believe and admit they were wrong dozens of times back and forth without any problems, maintaining cheerful engagement the entire time)
The ones on the site here don't do much better than the news articles to be honest. A great many of them are art pieces clearly made from some place of dissatisfaction with ai, which isnt really a representation of ai itself. many of them straight up contain the word chatgpt or the openai logo, which is a huge cop-out of what this site is even supposed to be about. Some specific ones I don't think are great:
Anyone tracked whether outlets actually swap stock photos for these? Seems like the bottleneck isn't image supply, it's editors defaulting to whatever's fastest to grab. Nice library, but incentives for lazy sourcing haven't changed.
Per Wikipedia:
> Meeseeks are a powder-blue-skinned species of humanoids (each of whom is named "Mr. Meeseeks") who are created to serve a single purpose which they will go to any length to fulfill. Each brought to life by a "Meeseeks Box", they typically live for no more than a few hours in a constant state of pain, vanishing upon completing their assigned task so as to end their own existence and thereby end their suffering; as such, the longer an individual Meeseeks remains alive, the more insane and unhinged they become.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Meeseeks