Sarah Wright

What questions do you have about A.I. that you're too embarrassed to ask?

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Hi all. Sarah here, Head of Content @ Product Hunt. I'm starting up a new article series in our AI newsletter, Deeper Learning, called Ask Kitty. It's a place where you can ask the questions you've been wondering about A.I. but have been too shy to ask. Why? One thing I've learned about A.I. is that a lot of people in tech assume you know a lot of things, and very few people actually know the things (or know them in-depth enough to explain them simply). Sometimes this dynamic prevents us from asking questions. And asking questions is one of the best ways to reduce our knowledge gap. And yes, you could ask ChatGPT, but based on my experience you're unlikely to get the full context you need. Not only will I work to answer your questions, I'll work to find the right people to help me answer them! So ask away!
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Maru Rivera
Does the AI chatbots I use remember question about my health and fitness and for how long? There can be some compromising info there 👀
Dominic Stewenson
AI wont become a new human, and wont completely replace us. Just think about traffic, roads and car movements. You cant go full autopilot with ai. Why? Cause autopilot has a difficult time merging when coming into a highway. The way people risk, accelerate and merge - not the way ai thinks. Ai doesn't have emotions and such thing, so it wont be able to conduct a lot of things on a road. Also, there's a good example. If you go full ai autopilot - you no longer need traffic lights? like, why would you need them? cars can pass in front of each other just by math calculations of speed and direction. BUT! when it comes to emergency like ambulance or police - they don't drive like others, they speed, they switch lanes fast, they drive on a opposite direction. that would completely destroy the concept. Anyway, just read news at https://www.simplevision.net and you'll be kept posted.
Prithvi Damera
AI can seem intimidating, but fundamental questions are crucial for understanding this transformative technology. Some key questions people might feel embarrassed to ask include: What exactly is AI? How does machine learning work? Can AI truly think like humans?
Yunxi Chang

I'm curious about how AI decides which data to prioritize when learning and training. Also, does AI have true "creativity" or is it just pattern recognition? But I've been too shy to ask these.

Anurag Tyagi

Love this, Sarah. The “everyone knows but no one explains” dynamic is so real, especially in AI, where terms like RAG or fine-tuning get thrown around casually, but most people (even builders) hesitate to ask follow-ups.

We ran into this while building BrandStori.ai, trying to simplify how AI can evaluate website messaging like a buyer, not just scan for SEO or structure. And the hardest part? Explaining what it does and why it matters without defaulting to buzzwords.

Excited for Ask Kitty. I think it’ll be a great way to bridge the “I get the vibe but not the details” gap for a lot of us.

Kyle Morris
My embarrassing AI question was: Can AI really help me with something as simple as deciding what to pack or wear? Most of the AI talk I saw was about coding, research, or enterprise use cases — so it felt almost silly to wonder about everyday things. But I was constantly overpacking for trips and stressing about unpredictable weather, so I decided to test it. That experiment turned into ClimaPal — an AI assistant that uses forecasted weather, plus your personal style and trip details, to recommend what to wear, what to pack, and when to prep for sudden changes (like an umbrella before the rain hits). This small question actually connects to a bigger idea I’m centering my startup around: building AI solutions that don’t just chase profit, but genuinely make people’s lives easier and contribute to humanity’s progress. Sometimes the questions we’re shy to ask spark the most meaningful ideas.
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