Is AI a Threat to Security Professionals?
For security guards watching cameras? Yes. For cybersecurity strategists? No. The threat is real—but unevenly distributed.
AI Question Hub
Explore direct questions about whether AI is conscious, dangerous, trustworthy, harmful, useful, or changing the internet.
12 Questions
Each answer separates what is known, what is uncertain, and what deserves caution.
For security guards watching cameras? Yes. For cybersecurity strategists? No. The threat is real—but unevenly distributed.
The chatbot says 'I think, therefore I am.' But does it think? Or does it just predict the next word? Consciousness remains the hardest problem.
Your brain is a muscle. AI is a crutch. Use the crutch too much, and the muscle atrophies. Here's what the research says.
AI is neither good nor bad. It's a tool—like fire, like electricity, like the internet. The question isn't whether AI is good or bad. It's whether we use it wisely.
AI assistants did not just add another search box. They changed where developers expect answers to come from.
Every time you ask AI to write an email, summarize an article, or solve a problem, your brain takes a day off. What happens when your brain takes too many days off?
AI is replacing some programming tasks. It is not replacing the full job of software engineering.
AI can solve math problems Einstein couldn't. It can recall facts he forgot. But 'smarter' is more complicated than test scores.
Every ChatGPT query, every DALL-E image, every Midjourney prompt has a cost—energy, water, carbon. Generative AI is not clean. Here's the truth.
In Islam, seeking knowledge is obligatory. But does that include artificial intelligence? The answer depends on intention and application.
Can Muslims converse with AI chatbots? The answer is yes—with important conditions about content, intention, and avoiding shirk.
Yes—a growing ecosystem of AI tools designed for Muslim needs: Quran study, prayer times, halal certification, Islamic finance, and more.