I don't think that AlphaGo has made players worse. My point is that there's no evidence that anything USEFUL or IMPORTANT has come from a system that has gotten so much hype (and cost ungodly amounts of money). If players aren't getting better (there's no evidence they are) or are quitting the game after playing, it's simply a net negative, along with DeepMind's other ventures.
Sorry, but this is just incorrect. Go players have gotten stronger over time overall [0][1], and AI discovered many new ideas that all top pros have incorporated into their game-play (idk how to give a source for this, it's just very well known in the Go community that the style of play changed drastically in response to AlphaGo, and absolutely everyone trains with AI these days).
It's not incorrect. The fact that Go players have gotten stronger over 300 years of recorded data does not in any way show that AlphaGo has made players better. The fact that players are suddenly memorizing AI moves in 2016 and beyond also does not mean they're getting better. This system does not measure how good the players are. It measures how much they copy AI moves (which is rather convenient, since the article is written by AI researchers). The phrase you quoted is so hilariously worded that I initially thought it might be satire. Indeed it does "reinforce the belief" that AI has boosted the skills of players - apparently the researchers themselves are not immune to this "reinforcement of belief"!
> My point is that there's no evidence that anything USEFUL or IMPORTANT has come from a system that has gotten so much hype
Geez. We are talking about pebbles on a wooden plank. They are not even colourful!
Go is super cool game, but it is that. Just a game. We are not talking about curing cancer, or solving world hunger, or reversing climate change here. So by the very formulation a Go playing AI can be cool, or interesting, or promising. But could it really be useful/important with all-caps? It sounds like you have too high expectations here.