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Past and future readings for the AI Coffee Klatch

2025 - 2026 AI Coffee Klatch Reads

Winter Term Read: AI Snake Oil. What artificial intelligence can do, what it can't, and how to tell the difference

Cover of the book AI Snake Oil

 

 

Join us for a conversation about the book AI Snake Oil: What artificial intelligence can do, what it can't and how to tell the difference.

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Friday, January 30th, 2:00-3:30 pm

OSU Valley Library

Check out the book from OSU Libraries: print, ebook, or audiobook. We understand you may not have time to read the entire book, so please come to the conversation having read Chapter 1, "Introduction". If you need a copy of Chapter 1, please email Laurie.Bridges@oregonstate.edu. 

The quarterly AI Coffee Klatch in the Valley Library is open to OSU faculty, instructors, staff, and graduate students. Coffee will be provided! Attendance is limited to 20.

 

From the publisher: 
Confused about AI and worried about what it means for your future and the future of the world? You’re not alone. AI is everywhere—and few things are surrounded by so much hype, misinformation, and misunderstanding. In AI Snake Oil, computer scientists Arvind Narayanan and Sayash Kapoor cut through the confusion to give you an essential understanding of how AI works and why it often doesn’t, where it might be useful or harmful, and when you should suspect that companies are using AI hype to sell AI snake oil—products that don’t work, and probably never will.

While acknowledging the potential of some AI, such as ChatGPT, AI Snake Oil uncovers rampant misleading claims about the capabilities of AI and describes the serious harms AI is already causing in how it’s being built, marketed, and used in areas such as education, medicine, hiring, banking, insurance, and criminal justice. The book explains the crucial differences between types of AI, why organizations are falling for AI snake oil, why AI can’t fix social media, why AI isn’t an existential risk, and why we should be far more worried about what people will do with AI than about anything AI will do on its own. The book also warns of the dangers of a world where AI continues to be controlled by largely unaccountable big tech companies.

By revealing AI’s limits and real risks, AI Snake Oil will help you make better decisions about whether and how to use AI at work and home.

Spring Term Read: Blood in the Machine. The origins of the rebellion against big tech

Cover of the book Blood in the Machine

 

 

Join us for a conversation about the book Blood in the Machine: The origins of the rebellion against big tech.

Spring Term (Date to be announced)

OSU Valley Library

The quarterly AI Coffee Klatch in the Valley Library is open to OSU faculty, instructors, staff, and graduate students. Coffee will be provided! Attendance is limited to 20; registration will open at the beginning of Spring quarter.

Note: This book was chosen because the author, Brian Merchant, will be giving a presentation at OSU's PRAx Center on May 1 at 5:30 pm.


From the publisher:
The most urgent story in modern tech begins not in Silicon Valley but two hundred years ago in rural England, when workers known as the Luddites rose up rather than starve at the hands of factory owners who were using automated machines to erase their livelihoods.

The Luddites organized guerrilla raids to smash those machines—on punishment of death—and won the support of Lord Byron, enraged the Prince Regent, and inspired the birth of science fiction. This all-but-forgotten class struggle brought nineteenth-century England to its knees.

Today, technology imperils millions of jobs, robots are crowding factory floors, and artificial intelligence will soon pervade every aspect of our economy. How will this change the way we live? And what can we do about it?

The answers lie in Blood in the Machine. Brian Merchant intertwines a lucid examination of our current age with the story of the Luddites, showing how automation changed our world—and is shaping our future.