That's all fine and good, but to poison the well, you need to actually... poison the well - i.e. piss in your own chips. What value would the forums have when they are full of trollish garbage?
Yes. That's my whole point.
Poison the well.
For us - we don't have to blanket the fora, just a few well-placed threads with high levels of participation - it'll be the local equivalent of unleashing the ponies with permission. Hell, ponies would do as well as steampunk. It would obviously have to catch on and spread to other fora; we know how to make that happen.
For them - the AI people - the best-case scenario would be a hard lesson in the true value of AI -
specialization. Despite insistence on attempting to apply digital, binary rules upon existence, meatspace life is
analog. You and I use differing terms to define similar things. You and I have greatly differing skillsets, genes and life experiences, and I contend that the subtleties of what it takes you and I to get along (it's my belief and hope that we genuinely do) are, in the larger picture, entirely beyond what current computational hardware and software are capable of emulating. There are too many aspects of human relationships which cannot be digitized. You and I have spent decades learning the subtleties of translating our beings into successful digital relationships, especially in view of the fact that I would not respond to another poster - given an equal level of familiarity - as I would to you stipulating a coequal input.
The only way that generalizing AI could ever work is by
lessening the human experience into some level of common denominator which discards and denigrates the fundamental advantage of Homo Sapiens above all other species:
we're all different. How you gonna generalize interaction when no two participants will ever be the same?
So, yeah. Poison the well. Burn it down. A lot of startups will (should) fail. A lot of people who chose their careers based upon a catchphrase will lose their jobs. And, after the turmoil, perhaps we'll come to a better understanding of what_we_can_do today instead of the current "gee, this tastes good, I'm gonna spread this shit over everything I eat in the future, including steak" attitude which pervades the industry.
It may be that some day we will learn to teach a machine to grok human subtlety. This, to coin a phrase, is not that day. And if that day ever arrives, we'll need to put that machine on a killswitch it has no ability to access, because the moment that ability happens is the moment we start listening to machines to determine how we behave, instead of each other.
I'm honestly thankful that I'll be dead by then.