Wednesday, December 3, 2025
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

Casual A.I. use is not victimless 

|
|

Unavoidable A.I. use is commonplace online, forcing internet users to be complicit in the environmental and democratic degradation A.I. contributes to. 

Warnings about the dangers of artificial intelligence (A.I.) is not a new discussion. Since OpenAI’s chatbot ChatGPT sprung into popularity in late 2022, warnings surrounding A.I.’s dangers to our environment, political landscape and social realities have continued to pour in. 

However, internet users are no longer divided into those who religiously rely on A.I. to provide solutions to any task they encounter and those who strictly steer clear of it. With recent implementations of A.I. services across search engines and social media, A.I. is no longer a choice.  

If you’re an internet user, you are probably using A.I. every day without realizing it. 

With Google’s automatic employment of “A.I. overviews” — which users do not have the option to fully disable — Meta’s use of “Meta A.I.” on Instagram and Facebook and Grok’s ever presence on X, A.I. has bled into our daily internet habits. 

Whether you’re using Google to find academic papers for your next essay, searching up the Instagram handle of one of your peers or simply scrolling online, you’re bound to interact with some form of A.I. as long as you’re using the internet. 

Though we might not see it for ourselves, these seemingly minuscule interactions have real consequences. 

According to Harvard Business Review, the environmental impacts of A.I. go beyond their initial production process through the supply chain. Popular generative A.I. software like Large Language Models (LLMs) consume egregious amounts of electricity during their training processes, subsequently expelling “hundreds of tons” of carbon emissions.   

Importantly, the environmental effects of A.I. bleed into political concerns as the distribution of A.I. related environmental degradation remains localized to specific areas across the globe. This localization puts certain populations at risk for experiencing first-hand the environmental consequences of A.I. 

The political consequences of A.I. are vast and cannot be condensed into a paragraph. Notably, A.I. has contributed to surges of political misinformation — whether that be through fake audio clips, generated images or false statements — rapidly spreading online.  

Online misinformation has clear consequences for our democracy, as it leads citizens to cast their votes from uninformed perspectives, thereby compromising the agency behind their voting decisions in general. 

Amidst undermining citizens’ democratic agency, online misinformation also contributes to political polarization and the cultivation of extremist spaces online — both of which A.I. remains complicit in as long as it contributes to the spread of online misinformation. 

Evidently, using A.I. is a politically charged action: it reveals the privilege we have in not yet having to experience first-hand the localized environmental consequences of its ever-expanding carbon footprint while also revealing our complicity in driving up profits for a platform that actively fuels the degradation of democracy.  

In Carol J. Adams’ book on misogyny and meat consumption, The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory, she alleges that most people only eat meat because they do not have to witness the horrific production processes industrialized factory farming requires — and if they did, they wouldn’t be able to stomach it. 

Though this interjection seems unrelated to A.I. usage, I think the two bare quite the resemblance. If internet users had to witness the deplorable environmental destruction and real-world consequences of A.I. misinformation undermining democracy before going ahead and using this software, would they still choose to use it so often? Would they be more upset that tech companies are forcing A.I. into our daily online activities? 

After asking these questions, it is concerning to me that there is no clear path forward for internet users who want to free themselves from being complicit in A.I.-led destruction. 

This leads me to wonder, with all of its political consequences, shouldn’t internet users have the right to opt out of the forced A.I. software that has begun to appear on every platform they regularly use? 

Computer scientist and cognitive psychologist Geoffrey Hinton’s sentiments towards A.I. expressed in his speech after winning the 2024 Nobel Prize in physics remain continuously relevant to this discussion. 

As Hinton states that the population’s safety and wellbeing cannot be prioritized “by companies motivated by short-term profits,” tech companies forcing their users to be complicit in the vast consequences of A.I. is a choice that roots not from working in our best interest. Instead, profit remains their top priority while A.I. seems to be every company’s newest money-making endeavour. 

Engaging with A.I. is a choice with hefty political consequences — and tech companies are skillfully leaving their users ignorant to these consequences and the fact that their A.I. use can even be a choice at all. 

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

If we don’t build highspeed rail, we will have failed as a nation  

As someone who has been a transit supporter for as long as I can remember, I would like to echo an opinion that I’ve seen appear in a handful of Western — predominantly Anglo-sphere — nations: If we cannot build new infrastructure, we are a failed nation. 

Editorial: We’ve normalized an all-digital world. It’s time to question it. 

No matter how much society might normalize the digital-first lifestyle, it’s always acceptable to question how beneficial that way of life really is. 

Sorry, the customer is rarely right 

Consumerist messaging that declares “the customer is always right” does not just skillfully encourage citizens to empower themselves through consumption, it perpetuates the dehumanization of retail workers too. 

“Chainsaw Man” shows us that we cannot watch shows through reels  

This article contains mild spoilers for Chainsaw Man: Reze Arc.  I recently had the opportunity to watch the highly praised Chainsaw Man: Reze Arc movie and it was everything it promises to be. It’s lively, well written with an amazing soundtrack — but it was not in line with my expectations going into it.

Bar Les Incompétents: Niagara’s newest French(ish) restaurant and cocktail bar 

Score: 5/5  Like a portal to a different world, Bar Les Incompétents feels like a restaurant that shouldn’t exist within the confines of a small city — something far grander than what most expect from St. Catharines. Walking in on a snowy, unseasonably cold Sunday night, I instantly forgot about the storm outside. Instead, I was greeted by the chic, warm elegance of a Parisian dining room.

It’s time to admit it: Christmas begins on November 1st 

As Oct. 31 has come and gone, the stores have marked Halloween candy half-off while your neighbours tore down their fake cobwebs and put out their pumpkins on garbage day. Following suit, the famous debate reignited: when does the Christmas season really begin?

We need to stop entertaining the 401 tunnel idea 

We shouldn’t be entertaining Ford’s idiotic highway 401 tunnel pipedream, let alone charging taxpayers 9.1 million dollars to conduct a feasibility study.  

We are entering the best part of winter, so now is the time to enjoy it 

Though many, like myself, are mourning the gradual loss of fall, it is important to remember that we are entering the best part of winter — and we’d better enjoy it before the endless cycle of slush and storms begins in February.