Vietnam.vn - Nền tảng quảng bá Việt Nam

The 'father' of Chat GPT shares his biggest fear about AI

VTC NewsVTC News17/05/2023


"My worst fear is that we cause serious harm — we, this field, the tech industry — to the world . I think that could happen in a number of different ways. That's why we started this company," Mr. Altman said during a hearing before the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Privacy, Technology and the Law on May 16.

Biggest fear: AI can be wrong

"People think that if this technology goes wrong, it could go bad, and we want to be vocal about that. We want to work with governments to prevent that from happening," said Altman, CEO of OpenAI (developer of ChatGPT).

The 'father' of Chat GPT shares his biggest fear about AI - 1

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is sworn in during a hearing before the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee. (Photo: Washington Post)

In his first testimony before the US Congress , Mr. Sam Altman also called for broad regulations, including a new government agency responsible for licensing AI models, to address growing concerns that artificial intelligence can distort reality and create unprecedented safety risks.

Mr. Altman has taken a serious stance on the ways in which artificial intelligence could “cause significant harm to the world,” and expressed a willingness to work with lawmakers to address the risks posed by his company’s ChatGPT and other AI tools.

Mr. Altman outlined “risky” behaviors that technology like ChatGPT could lead to, including spreading “live interactive misinformation” and emotional manipulation. He acknowledged that AI could be used to target drone attacks.

“If this technology goes wrong, it could go bad,” he said.

Yet, during nearly three hours of discussion about the dire potential consequences, Mr. Altman insisted that his company would continue to roll out AI technology.

Rather than taking a risk, he argues, “iterative deployments” of OpenAI’s AI models give organizations time to understand potential threats, a strategic move that puts “relatively weak” and “imperfect” technology into the world to help uncover the associated safety risks.

The 'father' of Chat GPT shares his biggest fear about AI - 2

Illustration of the ChatGPT application, which allows computers to chat with users like a human.

Over the past several weeks, Mr. Altman has been on a global goodwill tour, meeting privately with policymakers including President Biden and members of Congress to address concerns about the rapid deployment of ChatGPT and other technologies.

The May 16 hearing marks the first chance for the wider public to hear his message, at a time when Washington is increasingly struggling to regulate a technology that has disrupted jobs, facilitated fraud and spread misinformation.

In stark contrast to hearings with other tech CEOs, like TikTok's Shou Zi Chew and Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, US lawmakers gave Mr. Altman a relatively warm reception.

They appeared to be in listening mode, expressing openness to considering suggestions from Altman and two other witnesses at the hearing: IBM executive Christina Montgomery and New York University professor emeritus Gary Marcus.

During a Senate Judiciary Subcommittee hearing on privacy, technology and the law, lawmakers expressed deep concerns about the rapid development of artificial intelligence, arguing that recent advances could be more transformative than the internet, or as dangerous as an atomic bomb.

“This is your opportunity to tell us how to do this right,” Senator John Neely Kennedy told witnesses. “Use it.”

Lawmakers from both parties have expressed openness to the idea of ​​creating a government agency tasked with regulating the development of artificial intelligence, although previous efforts to create a specific agency with Silicon Valley oversight have failed in Congress due to party divisions over how to shape such a massive agency.

It is unclear whether such a proposal would gain widespread support among Republicans, who are generally wary of expanding government power. Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Missouri, warned that such an agency could be “trapped by the interests they are supposed to regulate.”

Senator Richard Blumenthal, chairman of the subcommittee, praised Mr. Altman's testimony at the hearing: “Sam Altman is a world apart from other CEOs... Not just in his words and rhetoric, but in his actual actions and his willingness to engage, to commit to concrete action.”

The hearing with CEO Altman comes as Washington policymakers are increasingly concerned about the threats posed by artificial intelligence, like ChatGPT and other innovative AI tools, particularly in relation to disinformation, data privacy, copyright infringement and cybersecurity.

Lawmakers have expressed regret over their relatively lax approach to the AI ​​industry since before the 2016 election. Their first hearing with Meta CEO Zuckerberg took place in 2018, when Facebook was already a giant and fresh from the Cambridge Analytica scandal, which saw data from 87 million Facebook users being accessed.

At the time, despite broad bipartisan consensus that AI posed a threat, lawmakers failed to agree on rules to govern its use or development.

(Source: Tin Tuc Newspaper/Fox News; Washington Post)


Useful

Emotion

Creative

Unique

Wrath



Source

Comment (0)

No data
No data

Same tag

Same category

Visit Lo Dieu fishing village in Gia Lai to see fishermen 'drawing' clover on the sea
Locksmith turns beer cans into vibrant Mid-Autumn lanterns
Spend millions to learn flower arrangement, find bonding experiences during Mid-Autumn Festival
There is a hill of purple Sim flowers in the sky of Son La

Same author

Heritage

;

Figure

;

Enterprise

;

No videos available

News

;

Political System

;

Destination

;

Product

;