Current:Home > NewsTech leaders urge a pause in the 'out-of-control' artificial intelligence race-VaTradeCoin
Tech leaders urge a pause in the 'out-of-control' artificial intelligence race
View Date:2025-01-09 11:52:43
Are tech companies moving too fast in rolling out powerful artificial intelligence technology that could one day outsmart humans?
That's the conclusion of a group of prominent computer scientists and other tech industry notables such as Elon Musk and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak who are calling for a 6-month pause to consider the risks.
Their petition published Wednesday is a response to San Francisco startup OpenAI's recent release of GPT-4, a more advanced successor to its widely used AI chatbot ChatGPT that helped spark a race among tech giants Microsoft and Google to unveil similar applications.
What do they say?
The letter warns that AI systems with "human-competitive intelligence can pose profound risks to society and humanity" — from flooding the internet with disinformation and automating away jobs to more catastrophic future risks out of the realms of science fiction.
It says "recent months have seen AI labs locked in an out-of-control race to develop and deploy ever more powerful digital minds that no one – not even their creators – can understand, predict, or reliably control."
"We call on all AI labs to immediately pause for at least 6 months the training of AI systems more powerful than GPT-4," the letter says. "This pause should be public and verifiable, and include all key actors. If such a pause cannot be enacted quickly, governments should step in and institute a moratorium."
A number of governments are already working to regulate high-risk AI tools. The United Kingdom released a paper Wednesday outlining its approach, which it said "will avoid heavy-handed legislation which could stifle innovation." Lawmakers in the 27-nation European Union have been negotiating passage of sweeping AI rules.
Who signed it?
The petition was organized by the nonprofit Future of Life Institute, which says confirmed signatories include the Turing Award-winning AI pioneer Yoshua Bengio and other leading AI researchers such as Stuart Russell and Gary Marcus. Others who joined include Wozniak, former U.S. presidential candidate Andrew Yang and Rachel Bronson, president of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, a science-oriented advocacy group known for its warnings against humanity-ending nuclear war.
Musk, who runs Tesla, Twitter and SpaceX and was an OpenAI co-founder and early investor, has long expressed concerns about AI's existential risks. A more surprising inclusion is Emad Mostaque, CEO of Stability AI, maker of the AI image generator Stable Diffusion that partners with Amazon and competes with OpenAI's similar generator known as DALL-E.
What's the response?
OpenAI, Microsoft and Google didn't respond to requests for comment Wednesday, but the letter already has plenty of skeptics.
"A pause is a good idea, but the letter is vague and doesn't take the regulatory problems seriously," says James Grimmelmann, a Cornell University professor of digital and information law. "It is also deeply hypocritical for Elon Musk to sign on given how hard Tesla has fought against accountability for the defective AI in its self-driving cars."
Is this AI hysteria?
While the letter raises the specter of nefarious AI far more intelligent than what actually exists, it's not "superhuman" AI that some who signed on are worried about. While impressive, a tool such as ChatGPT is simply a text generator that makes predictions about what words would answer the prompt it was given based on what it's learned from ingesting huge troves of written works.
Gary Marcus, a New York University professor emeritus who signed the letter, said in a blog post that he disagrees with others who are worried about the near-term prospect of intelligent machines so smart they can self-improve themselves beyond humanity's control. What he's more worried about is "mediocre AI" that's widely deployed, including by criminals or terrorists to trick people or spread dangerous misinformation.
"Current technology already poses enormous risks that we are ill-prepared for," Marcus wrote. "With future technology, things could well get worse."
veryGood! (7557)
Related
- What are the best financial advising companies? Help USA TODAY rank the top U.S. firms
- Woman arrested at Indiana Applebee's after argument over 'All You Can Eat' deal: Police
- ‘Shoot me up with a big one': A timeline of the last days of Matthew Perry
- Dakota Johnson Confirms Chris Martin Relationship Status Amid Breakup Rumors
- RHOBH's Erika Jayne Reveals Which Team She's on Amid Kyle Richards, Dorit Kemsley Feud
- Scientists think they know the origin of the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs
- Texas jurors are deciding if a student’s parents are liable in a deadly 2018 school shooting
- Her name was on a signature petition to be a Cornel West elector. Her question: What’s an elector?
- Amazon Best Books of 2024 revealed: Top 10 span genres but all 'make you feel deeply'
- Georgia deputy killed in shooting during domestic dispute call by suspect who took his own life
Ranking
- Gossip Girl Actress Chanel Banks Reported Missing After Vanishing in California
- ‘Shoot me up with a big one': A timeline of the last days of Matthew Perry
- Harris Stirs Hope for a New Chapter in Climate Action
- Watch: Dallas Cowboys kicker Brandon Aubrey nails 66-yard field goal
- Barbora Krejcikova calls out 'unprofessional' remarks about her appearance
- Phoenix police launch website detailing incidents included in scathing DOJ report
- Georgia deputy killed in shooting during domestic dispute call by suspect who took his own life
- DNA search prompts arrest of Idaho murder suspect in 51-year-old cold case, California police say
Recommendation
-
Beyoncé's Grammy nominations in country categories aren't the first to blur genre lines
-
Jailed Chinese activist faces another birthday alone in a cell, his wife says
-
UFC 305 results: Dricus Du Plessis vs. Israel Adesanya fight card highlights
-
Pharmacist blamed for deaths in US meningitis outbreak will plead no contest in Michigan case
-
Special counsel Smith asks court to pause appeal seeking to revive Trump’s classified documents case
-
Velasquez pleads no contest to attempted murder in shooting of man charged with molesting relative
-
Jana Duggar, oldest Duggar daughter, marries Stephen Wissmann: 'Dream come true'
-
Lawsuit: Kansas school employee locked teen with Down syndrome in closet, storage cage