Comment by openasocket

1 day ago

The entire enterprise of AI for medical advice reminds me a lot of the early 20th century. When X-rays and radioactivity were first discovered, industry rushed to commercialize it. You could get an X-ray in a shoe store to see how your shoe fits! People were putting radium in water and selling it as some sort of curative. Radium was put in paint to make things glow in the dark. Thorium was put into toothpaste. All in this endless rush to commercialize a technology that had captured the public interest without any particular concern for its efficacy.

I'm not saying AI causes cancer, but this rush to sell something in the medical space before proper testing and evaluation really feels similar. And the common refrain I hear is "this so much cheaper than going to a doctor, this will help give access to medicine to those who cannot afford it." Which actually makes it more concerning in my mind. At this point AI is a multi-trillion dollar industry. For-profit companies providing unregulated, under-studied services, targetting people who might not be able to afford standard medical care, doesn't come off as altruistic; it comes off as predatory.