THE VALLEY CURRENT®️ COMPUTERLAW GROUP LLP
What if the most persuasive voice in public policy is no longer human? In this episode of The Valley Current®, host Jack Russo examines emerging research suggesting that large language models may now rival or outperform human experts in persuading people on controversial public issues. While fears of AI deciding the 2024 elections largely fell flat, a quieter and potentially more profound disruption is underway. As trust in institutions declines and AI grows more personalized, tireless, and conversational, the battle may no longer be over misinformation alone but over who defines reality itself. From debate-winning algorithms and machine persuasion to the legal divide separating the United States, Europe, and China, this episode explores a troubling possibility: if AI becomes more trusted than human expertise, public opinion may be shaped less by truth and more by whoever builds the most persuasive machine. Jack Russo Managing Partner Jrusso@computerlaw.com [Jrusso@computerlaw.com] www.computerlaw.com [https://www.computerlaw.com] https://www.linkedin.com/in/jackrusso [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jackrusso] "Every Entrepreneur Imagines a Better World"®️
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