Mindful Marketing
  • Home
    • Ethics Challenge
  • About
    • Mission
    • Mindful Matrix
    • Leadership
  • Mindful Matters Blog
  • Mindful Marketing Book
  • Mindful Ads?
  • Contact

Who will be the Adult in the Room with AI?

4/1/2025

19 Comments

 
Picture

by David Hagenbuch - professor of marketing at Messiah University -
​author of 
Honorable Influence - founder of Mindful Marketing -
author of Mindful Marketing: Business Ethics that Stick 

“Like a kid in a candy store” – If you’ve ever experienced unlimited access to your most desired indulgences, you may have appreciated someone stepping in to help you ‘know when to say when.’ AI quickly has become that candy store for many whose mouths are open wide to the technology’s amazing treats but who entertain few thoughts of the actions’ broader impacts. So, who will help AI users ‘know when to say when’?
 
Individuals and organizations are rapidly embracing AI to enhance productivity, from personalizing emails, to providing customer service, to optimizing delivery routes, to predicting machine maintenance, to trading stocks. In fact, several of the AI examples in the last sentence came courtesy of ChatGPT.
 
A financial sign of AI’s rocketing popularity is the report that OpenAI, ChatGPT’s parent, expects its revenue to triple this year to $12.7 billion. That expectation likely stems in part from the current U.S. administration’s promised $500 billion investment in AI infrastructure in an industry partnership called Stargate.
 
It’s not surprising that AI has come so swiftly into widespread use. Criteria that predict how fast consumers adopt new products, or how quickly they diffuse into the market, suggest rapid acceptance of AI:
  • Relative advantage: Compared to the time and effort it takes to draft a report, create a complex image, etc., AI is much quicker, giving it a great economic advantage.
  • Compatibility: AI tools like ChatGPT work well with many of the productivity tools we already use, such as our smartphones’ apps, and the new technology is increasingly integrated directly into other tools.
  • Observability: AI is easy to see around us, from voice assistants (Siri, Alexa), to autocomplete functions (Messages, Word), to map apps (route optimization and traffic updates). We can often observe friends, family, and coworkers using those tools. The challenge, if any, is to realize that those commonplace applications are AI.
  • Complexity and Triability: Although AI is among the most sophisticated technologies humans have ever created, it is very easy to use, e.g., as simple as typing or speaking a command. It’s also easy to experiment with many basic AI tools, e.g., several chatbots, offer free versions, including ChatGPT, Claude, and Copilot.
 
In sum, AI helps individuals and organizations accomplish two of life’s most prized goals: to work more effectively and efficiently. Beyond that practicality, many AI applications are exciting and fun. Some possess a jaw-dropping wow-factor that makes one wonder how the technology can do something so challenging so fast.
 
But just as too much candy can be bad for one’s teeth, too much AI is proving problematic for some of its users, as well as for individuals who barely know about it.
 
Even as many individuals and organizations dive headlong and uninhibited into AI, many others feel some, if not much, dissonance about its use. In a recent survey of knowledge workers that included 800 C-suite leaders and 800 lower-level employees, Writer/Workplace found a wide disparity in perceptions of generative AI, for instance:
  • 77% of employees using AI indicated that they were an “AI champion” or had potential to become one.
  • 71% of executives indicated there were challenges in adopting AI.
  • More than 33% of executives said AI has been “a massive disappointment.”
  • 41% of Gen Z employees were “actively sabotaging their company’s AI strategy.”
  • About 67% of executives reported that adoption of AI has led to “tension and division.”
  • 42% of executives indicated that AI adoption was “tearing their company apart.”
 
Why did AI produce so much angst for these research participants? Unfortunately, the article summarizing the study’s findings didn’t identify the causes; however, I have good guesses of what some of the reasons were.
 
Picture
 
In May 2024, I wrote “Questions are the Key to AI and Ethics” which identified a dozen areas of moral concern related to AI use: Ownership, Attribution, Employment, Accuracy, Deception, Transparency, Privacy, Bias, Relationships, Skills, Stewardship, and Indecency.
 
Looking back 10 months later, a long time in the life of technology, it seems the list has aged well, unfortunately. There are increasingly pressing concerns in each of the areas, such as:
  • Ownership, Attribution, Employment: Google and Open AI recently asked the White House “for permission to train AI on copyrighted content.” Over 400 leading artists, including Ron Howard and Paul McCartney, signed a letter voicing their disapproval.
  • Stewardship: AI is notoriously an “energy hog” whose data centers require far more electricity than that of their predecessors. Jesse Dodge, a research analyst at the Allen Institute for AI, shared that “One query to ChatGPT uses approximately as much electricity as could light a lightbulb for about 20 minutes.” Energy production for AI is the reason Microsoft has signed a deal to reopen the infamous nuclear power plant Three Mile Island.
  • Bias, Indecency: In his article, “Grok 3: The Case for an Unfiltered AI Model,” Shelly Palmer compares AI models that learn from sanitized datasets to xAI’s Grok 3, which has an “unhinged” mode that doesn’t restrict “harmful content—adult entertainment, hate speech, extremism.” Using the opening metaphor, Grok 3 seems like a wide-open candy shop with no adult supervision.
 
Certainly, some people have practical inhibitions about AI because they’re not sure how, when, or why to use it. Others, though, likely have moral concerns, including the ones above. I believe much of that AI dissonance stems from values embedded in every person, regardless of their worldview: principles that include decency, fairness, honesty, respect, and responsibility.
 
Granted, we don’t see these values in everyone all the time, but they’re there. Rational people know it’s indecent to show sexually explicit material in public, it’s dishonest to lie, it’s unfair to steal, etc. So when they see AI generating indecent content, creating misleading deepfakes, or appropriating others’ intellectual property, those innate values rightly spur feelings of unease.
 
So, back to the question that opened this piece: Who will keep rapidly advancing AI in moral check? Here are those influencers in reverse order of impact:
 
5) AI Itself: Over time and if trained on the right types of data, AI may become better at identifying and addressing moral issues. However, from my experience, although the technology is good at answering questions, it’s ill-equipped to ask them, especially ones involving ethical issues.
 
4) Laws: Clear-thinking senators and representatives often enact legislation that’s in the public’s best interest. However, given the time it takes to envision, propose, and pass such laws, they inevitably lag behind the behavior they aim to constrain, especially when the actions involve fast-moving tech.
 
3) Industry Associations: These organizations play useful roles in identifying opportunities and challenges that face their members. It takes time, but they often craft values statements and related documents that can help guide moral decision-making. Unfortunately, though, their edicts usually can’t be enforced the ways governments’ laws can, so compliance may be minimal.
 
2) Organizations: When they want to, business and other types of organizations can make decisions quickly. Morally grounded leaders can create policies to promote ethical behavior. The challenge is that even this guidance may not be specific enough for new or very nuanced moral dilemmas, and it’s usually impossible to speak into every action as it occurs.
 
1) Individuals: They are able to address issues as they occur and can be specially equipped for those ethical challenges. When moral issues arise, they are the ones who can and must hit pause and ask, “Yes, AI can do this, but should it?”
 
Rational principle-driven people, who embrace their innate senses of decency, fairness, honesty, respect, and responsibility, can quickly question AI's potential ethical encroachment as they see it and pump the brakes on strategies that seem likely to violate one or more of these values.
 
In the candy store that is AI, each of us needs to be the adult in the room. While we need to understand and encourage the many good things AI offers, we also need to know when to say, “That’s enough.” Ensuring that AI rightly serves humanity makes for Mindful Marketing.


Picture
Subscribe to Mindful Matters blog.
Learn more about the Mindful Matrix.
Check out the book, Mindful Marketing: Business Ethics that Stick
19 Comments
3 day cruise bahamas $99 link
4/8/2025 11:44:06 am

Thanks for sharing this informative article!

Reply
4 day cruise from tampa link
4/8/2025 11:45:40 am

Great article! I had a good time browsing your website. I don't leave very often remarks, but you deservingly get a thumbs up! Thank you for sharing your knowledge. Keep it up.

Reply
Freight Forwarding link
4/8/2025 11:47:13 am

Nice post!At Pharaohs Cargo, we expertly deliver seamless logistics solutions worldwide, ensuring your cargo is handled with precision, care, and speed.

Reply
snake control near me link
4/15/2025 05:16:49 am

Great insights, thanks for sharing! I’ve written something similar here – would love your thoughts.

Reply
Victoria
4/27/2025 09:34:45 pm

I agree that AI can be extremely dangerous and we should be careful with it. Though AI can be extremely helpful in some cases, it is important to take a moment and think about when we should and shouldn't use its resources. I do think that laws, organizations, individuals, etc. have the power to keep AI in check, but it can be difficult when AI is developing and progressing so quickly. Laws may become extremely important for keeping AI in check, but there is a risk because AI develops faster than laws can be passed.

The section about stewardship was also very interesting. I never knew before that AI required so much energy! That is also something to be careful of, but how is the world supposed to control that/place restrictions on AI use because of its energy requirements?

Reply
faith
4/30/2025 02:07:23 pm

I did not know that using AI required as much energy as you said that it requires in this article. That makes me a little more hesitant to use Chat, but I know that I still will because it is such a helpful tool. I hope that improving technologies can make AI more energy efficient.

Reply
Katelyn
4/30/2025 02:35:22 pm

I agree with a lot of what this post points out. It brings up a lot of concerns that I have briefly thought about when AI started to become popular. I saw a lot of problems with it right away, including misuse. Many peers took advantage of the resource and made life harder on teachers and fellow students because their work had to be checked and we had to be careful of wording.

In addition, I believe that overusing AI will negatively affect society because everyone will rely on it to give us quick answers rather than struggling and learning through research. I think it will further extend our habit of a "go, go, go" mentality that takes over much of our lives and prevents us from truly understanding and caring about a topic.

Reply
Mason
4/30/2025 09:01:03 pm

I agree with your metaphor of AI being similar to a candy store and found it very fitting. Like candy, using AI too much can have many harms. One of the main problems that I've found with AI is that it is replacing what makes each of us humans in the first place. AI is being used for creative projects, writing, and to generate ideas, when, for all of history, humans have been creating these things.

I also agree with you that individuals are responsible for keeping AI in control. Ultimately, it is up to us to determine whether certain uses of AI are right or wrong.

Reply
Jacob Kipe
5/1/2025 10:03:53 am

I agree that Ai is something that needs to be regulated harshly. I think that one of the biggest things that will become a problem is going to be students who have used AI to get their degree. I personally know amazing students who have been ruined by AI it has corrupted their ability to work honestly and they have fallen into the habit of using AI for absolutely everything. Students not knowing how to use their degree and having the inability to do the work that hundreds of thousands of dollars were spent on is not only damaging to the work force but a dishonest practice. I think that schools need to be more preventative about the way students take quizzes and do homework and more light needs to be shed upon the students side of this as well. This is wh i think AI needs to be regulated heavily.

Reply
Isaac
5/1/2025 11:07:31 am

I agree, and I think the too much, and not knowing when to stop has been going on as technology keeps advancing. We see new helpful tools come about but then that causes people to over use them and forget the point of them in the first place. This effect is enhanced with how useful ai can be. It is often used as a cop out now to get out of actually needing to do the work.

Reply
kaleb
5/1/2025 11:11:03 am

I like how you put it "like a kid in a candy store". AI is so beneficial just like a lot of things, but too much of it and AI can be bad. But the reality is, everything in this world is like that, and I think it all comes down to us, the users. AI is something that we control, so it can only turn out to be harmful if we over use it or have harmful intentions.

Reply
Ian
9/1/2025 02:32:15 pm

I agree with your points on AI. I think the best way to keep AI in a moral check is for the individual people who use it and know what to use it to do and what not to use it to do. I think it will be important to closely monitor AI and regulate what it can do and use to answer questions, because it can be a very powerful tool. If used properly, it will make jobs more effective and efficient, but I think knowing how to use it will be our main challenge.

Reply
John Condon
9/4/2025 08:23:35 pm

I really appreciated this article. I find that it is extremely concerning to see how the internet is becoming a place for all worldly pleasures to be fulfilled. It is becoming a smorgasbord of debauchery. I would agree that there needs to be safeguards in place to keep boundaries around content available on the internet. There almost needs to be age regulations on content that protects minors under the age of 18. I believe that explicit content is too easy to stumble upon on the internet. I believe that AI can be a very powerful tool to replicate human processing capabilities, but it is only as good as the user. We need to get better at using AI and using it responsibly.

Reply
Davis P
9/5/2025 09:38:41 am

I think it is so true that many have opened their mouths to AI as of right now. I feel like in my own experience of using AI, I would have to agree with the advantages that it offers. Relative advantage- it definitely takes less time and less mind energy to draft something. And although it is super complex, things like ChatGpt are incredibly easy to use, so I agree with that short list. However, I do agree that Ai takes away from the feelings, emotions, etc, that a real person can convey and so on. Like the last paragraph stated, I agree that Ai has a lot of good to offer. With its easy use and the speed that it operates at can offer advantages to some. But I also agree that we need to know when to say that's enough. It can take away from the value of a real human.

Reply
David Martinez link
9/5/2025 12:16:30 pm

NA

Reply
David Martinez link
9/5/2025 12:26:13 pm

AI is prevalent today, everywhere you go. I don’t think I know a single person who hasn’t at least tried using AI, whether it’s ChatGPT or the smart AI used in social media apps to converse. The main advantages of AI, especially in this case, come down to time (since AI is easily accessible and can provide answers or complete assignments in seconds), which is closely tied to convenience.
Unfortunately, as helpful as it is to get instant answers, I feel that humans are starting to rely less on their God-given minds and bodies. People are beginning to "think less" and simply take the easier route with AI. For example, in a difficult math class like statistics, instead of learning and working through a complex problem, many students would rather get the answer just for the sake of completion.
Overall, AI is convenient and necessary for efficiency at work, in school, and at home, but it should never fully replace human thinking and processing capabilities.

Reply
maltepe asansörlü evden eve nakliyat link
9/15/2025 04:33:21 pm

çok güzel beğendim

Reply
Parker W-M
9/17/2025 11:24:36 pm

I agree that AI can be a very dangerous tool if used too much and in an unproperly manner. Many kids in high school have become dependent on AI, instead of learning grammar structure, they go to Grammarly, and have it fix everything they write. Also, kids use ai to write their entire essays and just change the words around but keep the same thoughts and ideas in order to get around plagiarism checkers.

That's not to say there aren't kids who just use ai to help get inspiration for a writing just to have an example to keep the mind moving. There are advantages to using AI, many programs can help keep productivity up and organization up as well, but it comes to a point where yes when is it time to regulate AI, especially as people start becoming more dependent on it.

Reply
OxyPure air purifier link
10/8/2025 10:40:39 am

OxyPure air purifier – clean air wherever you go

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Subscribe to receive this blog by email

    Editor

    David Hagenbuch,
    founder of
    Mindful Marketing  and author of Honorable Influence
    and
    ​Mindful Marketing: Business Ethics that Stick

    Archives

    November 2025
    October 2025
    September 2025
    August 2025
    July 2025
    June 2025
    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014

    Categories

    All
    + Decency
    + Fairness
    Honesty7883a9b09e
    * Mindful
    Mindless33703c5669
    > Place
    Price5d70aa2269
    > Product
    Promotion37eb4ea826
    Respect170bbeec51
    Simple Minded
    Single Minded2c3169a786
    + Stewardship

    RSS Feed

    Share this blog:

    Subscribe to
    Mindful Matters
    blog by email

    Illuminating
    ​Marketing Ethics ​

    Encouraging
    ​Ethical Marketing  ​


    Copyright 2025
    David Hagenbuch

Proudly powered by Weebly