Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Before AI can destroy humanity, we have to employ it to make decisions humans have been paid to make for centuries. But in the year since those cries from the creators of AI themselves, the threat ...
The weirdest job in AI. Adam Rogers. Updated December 16, 2024 at 9:56 AM. Getty Images; Alyssa Powell/BI. People worry all the time about how artificial intelligence could destroy humanity.
Artificial intelligence and Large Language Models like OpenAI's ChatGPT offer new ways to make money from home. But AI is also threatening some jobs to the point where they may not exist within a ...
Despite other differences, the x-risk school [b] agrees with Pinker that an advanced AI would not destroy humanity out of emotion such as revenge or anger, that questions of consciousness are not relevant to assess the risk, [102] and that computer systems do not generally have a computational equivalent of testosterone. [103]
A global leader warns that artificial intelligence could bring “catastrophic risks” to humanity. Here's why. Untamed AI Will Probably Destroy Humanity, Global Leader Declares
The letter highlights both the positive and negative effects of artificial intelligence. [7] According to Bloomberg Business, Professor Max Tegmark of MIT circulated the letter in order to find common ground between signatories who consider super intelligent AI a significant existential risk, and signatories such as Professor Oren Etzioni, who believe the AI field was being "impugned" by a one ...
But the generative AI job-pocalypse won’t destroy every job it touches. As with all things, it’s a bit more complicated than that. And the truth is, there’s still a lot we don’t know.
It is unknown whether human-level artificial intelligence will arrive in a matter of years, later this century, or not until future centuries. Regardless of the initial timescale, once human-level machine intelligence is developed, a "superintelligent" system that "greatly exceeds the cognitive performance of humans in virtually all domains of interest" would most likely follow surprisingly ...