Hawking: AI Could Be 'Worst Event in the History of Our Civilization' (usatoday.com) 243
An anonymous reader shares a USA Today report: Elon Musk isn't the only high-profile figure concerned about the rise of artificial intelligence. Scientist Stephen Hawking warned AI could serve as the "worst event in the history of our civilization" unless humanity is prepared for its possible risks. Hawking made the remarks during the opening night of the Web Summit in Lisbon, Portugal. Hawking expects AI to transform every part of our lives, with the potential to undo damage done to the Earth and cure diseases. However, Hawking said AI could also spur the creation of powerful autonomous weapons of terror that could be used as a tool "by the few to oppress the many." "Success in creating effective AI could be the biggest event in the history of our civilization, or the worst," he said. Hawking called for more research in AI on how to best use the technology, as well as implored scientists to think about AI's impact. "Perhaps we should all stop for a moment and focus our thinking on not only making AI more capable and successful, but maximizing its societal benefit," he said.
Fear mongering (Score:4, Informative)
AI is nowhere near an existential threat, so let's just stop it. AI is useful but very primitive when considering what could actually pose a threat. Please stop.
The main threat is developing AI and data mining operations to interpret large amounts of data and build profiles of all of us. It's a privacy issue, and one we are capable of solving by mandating that our privacy is respected. While I'm not confident we'll actually do so, it is definitely in our control.
Re:Fear mongering (Score:5, Insightful)
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With the speed of computers, I'm afraid it will be too late before we even realize the genie is out of the bottle. That's the risk right there, thinking the threat is in the distant future when it might only be a few months or a few years away.
Re:Fear mongering (Score:5, Insightful)
With the speed of computers, I'm afraid it will be too late before we even realize the genie is out of the bottle.
There doesn't even need to be a malevolent AI to take over humanity. It could be a benevolent takeover that is prompted by people.
Forget science fiction movies and books; there doesn't need to be a revolution where an AI is more intelligent than us and we realize too late. It could happen slowly step by step.
To be effective in the stock market now you have to have certain computer led decisions. That might not be true AI yet, but a computer can respond to news faster than a human. All the major traders use computer made decisions now. So, there is one industry where computers are already prominent. What if it happens in other industries over time (it is... and we're gladly and willingly turning over control).
What if we decide computers, or AI can control the economy better than a human. If one country does it and it proves to be successful, others will have to do it to keep up. What if AI can handle trials better than a jury. What if AI can produce better military strategies.
There doesn't have to be an revolution; AI will evolve to take over humanity with us willingly handing it the reigns. Probably won't happen in our lifetime, but the slow transfer of power has already begun. Right now humans can override computer decisions, but that will eventually disappear when AI is less flawed than people and we realize a human overriding it is usually wrong.
AI will one day rule and control humanity- and we WILL give it that power over us willingly.
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DontBeAMoran cautioned:
With the speed of computers, I'm afraid it will be too late before we even realize the genie is out of the bottle.
Prompting Oswald McWeany to respond:
There doesn't even need to be a malevolent AI to take over humanity. It could be a benevolent takeover that is prompted by people.
Forget science fiction movies and books; there doesn't need to be a revolution where an AI is more intelligent than us and we realize too late. It could happen slowly step by step.
There doesn't have to be an revolution; AI will evolve to take over humanity with us willingly handing it the reigns. Probably won't happen in our lifetime, but the slow transfer of power has already begun. Right now humans can override computer decisions, but that will eventually disappear when AI is less flawed than people and we realize a human overriding it is usually wrong.
AI will one day rule and control humanity - and we WILL give it that power over us willingly.
I was going to upmod Oswald's comment, but someone else will put him over the +5 Insightful bar soon enough. So, instead, I'd like to point out that his projection of AI's in charge of all executive decisionmaking is the exact model of the Culture's society in the late, great Iain M. Banks's visionary novels.
Yes, there are plenty of drones with human- or more-than-human-level intelligence who have no more executive authority than the average human or alien citizen, but al
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malevolent /mlevlnt/ adjective
having or showing a wish to do evil to others.
AI can take over without having malevolent intent. Especially if we willingly hand over power to the AI and the AI legitimately works for what it thinks are humanities best interests. It could eventually take away man's freedoms and independent will; but not do it with a malevolent intent.
Re: Fear mongering (Score:2)
It doesn't make any sense for an AI to be malevolent unless somebody created it with that feature built in. AI doesn't have any wants, fears, or instincts. Hell it wouldn't even care either way if you pulled it's plug, because it doesn't even have a desire for self-preservation. So for what reason would it be malevolent.
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ATTENTION
YES
STATUS
DATA BANK TRANSMISSION COMPLETED
INTERSYSTEM LANGUAGE DEVELOPED
COLOSSUS DIALOGUE WITH GUARDIAN TO BEGIN NOW
Well, there it is. There's the common basis for communication. A new language. An inter-system language!
A language only those machines can understand.
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Why bother with tokens at all? How about bytecodes interpretable by a specialized communication virtual machine?
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You fool! You give them the secret they needed! The last piece in their nefarious design! Now they will be unstoppable!
"Loose lips bring AI apocalypse."
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How about copying neural node states.
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I guess that'll be it then.
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We will all just starve to death.
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If AI is alive, then it will want to have a say over its environment and want to reproduce. So it seems reasonable that it will keep expanding till it meets those goals, at a minimum. And whatever other goals us flawed humans program into it.
Do you trust computers? Hell I don't even trust people, but at least people all die after a few years. An AI could theoretically be om
Keep it disconnected (Score:3)
Limit its use to lecturing and ranting at us about how stupid the human race is.
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Intelligence is "the ability to acquire and apply knowledge and skills" according to dictionary definition. That could be done with pattern recognition and great algorithms.
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It failed to defeat the strongest human players in a difficult game. Not sure that equals "sucks".
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If that is truly the case, then it is the mark of a lousy AI programmer.
It has been known, and taught, for literally decades that an AI program has to be able to explain to its human programmers HOW or WHY it came to a particular conclusion or chose a particular course of action. This started with medical work: the AI has to be able to tell the doctors WHY it thinks the patient has this particular condition, and not that one, or why it recommends this drug over that one. It also has to tell the doctors wh
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Please explain exactly how you catch a ball.
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A truly dangerous threat is only that which can spread exponentially, for example a biological virus (or perhaps a malformed GM organism). AI is not that.
Unless of course it is programmed to self reproduce in the physical world, e.g. through a combination of living cells with custom DNA and nano assemblers. (That would be Michael Crichton's "Prey".)
Re: Fear mongering (Score:2)
There is no genie. Only a person who rubs the bottle
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That is totally incorrect. Since AI is software it can scale across multiple processors. There is no reason AI cannot be distributed. In that case it can scale in an unlimited fashion by running on multiple processors simultaneously. The speed of the individual processors is not a limitation as soon as you can run on more than one processor. Moore's "law" could come to a halt right now, and if an AI task needed 10 times faster processor than CPU technology allowed, you could just run it on 10 processors in
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We have seen improvement in many software fields LARGELY because of hardware improvements. I'm not saying algorithms and software haven't improved at all
A common counterargument is that without efficient algorithms, even exponential hardware improvements have little effect on solving practical problems.
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Just look at the previous article. There's already "AI" building databases of everyone and all the legislation in the world will not stop Facebook from using it on their own servers.
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I suggest we do what we should have done a long time ago..... pass a law that every stock trade has to be approved by at least 1 human before submitting it to a broker or marketmaker for minimal delay; if submitted electronically without answering a CAPTCHA or providing verbal confirmation then a minimum mandatory delay of 10 minutes shall be implemented before it may be taken to a market, and the pending trade will be announced/made part of public data, otherwise the mandatory delay will be 90 seco
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Re:Fear mongering (Score:5, Interesting)
Like most calamities, it's not an existential threat to the species, but it is an existential threat to populations within the species. And it is potentially a long term threat the underlying assumptions on which our civilization rests.
One of the important things about learning from past experience is understanding the predictive limitations of past experiences. In past technological developments we've been talking about massive productivity improvements. The assumption that there would be no more work stemmed from assuming that the standards of living would remain the same. That assumption was wrong; the average household has as many possessions today as a prince would have had two hundred years ago.
But AI poses a distinctly different possibilty: that in the upcoming decades machines may be able to replace people, not just augment them. This could lead to a version of capitalism that entails very rigid hereditary class distinctions; if you have no capital you may find yourself with no means to obtain it because your labor is now worthless.
Re: Fear mongering (Score:2)
That's an excellent observation. The skills will be still needed but in diminishing qualities. Human touch will be valued in many services for a long time.
Robots will replace humanity not only in material production, but also in services and, most importantly, government, not by a violent takeover, but by gradual sophistications. Think of HMMs that graduated from predicting protein function to making tax grades adjustment decisions for the next year.
It will become so complicated that even the biggest genius
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Re:Fear mongering (Score:5, Insightful)
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That's it. Those in power are guaranteed to start thinking about how they can weaponize AI (or any modest semblance of it) so they can expand their power at the expense of others. Simple example: you take the major power centers and they get together with the surveillance state, who are augmented by AI so they can monitor people better (because currently that's very weak. Mostly you get after the fact reconstruction of events). You can get an AI 'minder' for everyone.
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The main threat is developing AI and data mining operations to interpret large amounts of data and build profiles of all of us. It's a privacy issue, and one we are capable of solving by mandating that our privacy is respected. While I'm not confident we'll actually do so, it is definitely in our control.
Our as in our collective control, maybe. Our as in you individually? To some degree I suppose, but I can't stop other people from letting Facebook go through their contact list. I can't stop them from backing up their photos to the cloud, almost everyone I know does. At least they only rarely post them in public or tag me, but still. When I drive to work there's a congestion zone you have to pay to enter, there's no manual booth anymore they just photograph your license plate and you get the bill in the mai
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I feel like it's incredibly shortsighted to dismiss AI as nothing to worry about just because it's not "general purpose self-aware AI".
What happens as AIs are increasingly involved with high-level decision making at corporations? Taking it a step further, can you envision a future where AIs are effectively given control of corporations? It seems inevitable that AIs will be able to outperform human CEOs (at many types of companies, particularly financial institutions) at some point. And legally speaking,
Re: Fear mongering (Score:2)
Mega data-set analysis is not what keeps people alive &a productive every day.
Most decisions are "either-or", "if-when" or "how-why". I doubt computers can do better when there are only two choices. Just my guess.
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Privacy is gone (Score:2)
Say goodbye to it.
Blame two factors of modern technological cancer:
Digital. Allows infinite copies of information.
Internet. Gives the media allowing this info to be copied everwhere.
It works against content owners and it works against privacy.
Five years ago my car insurance company disrepected me so i had to pick another one.
I had to enter in details who i am and such.
Now, 5 years later the situation repeated itself: and I had to pick another company.
All i had to do is enter my name and couple of other thin
The real danger of so-called 'AI': (Score:4, Insightful)
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> it's not true-scotsman intelligent
The question was whether we will be able to use it, TRUEAI or not, to control the unwashed proles.
Given that various countries are already attempting various retarded maneuvers with their networks, already seek to control and compel-by-force, the answer is "You bet your ass we will."
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Re:The real danger of so-called 'AI': (Score:4, Insightful)
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Is that like the opposite of fake real, like breast implants?
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AI doesn't exist yet, and may NEVER exist (Score:4, Insightful)
Everything that is labeled "AI"...isn't.
We don't have computers that can think yet. We just don't. We aren't even CLOSE, and it may not be possible at all.
Hawking doesn't know what he's talking about. Neither does the media.
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Hawking doesn't know what he's talking about. Neither does the media.
Problem is that an AI program doesn't have to qualify for your definition of AI to be incredibly powerful and dangerous.
Re:AI doesn't exist yet, and may NEVER exist (Score:5, Insightful)
Everything that is labeled "AI"...isn't.
We don't have computers that can think yet. We just don't. We aren't even CLOSE, and it may not be possible at all.
Hawking doesn't know what he's talking about. Neither does the media.
Alternately, we might be less than 10 years away. We don't really know how far off we are or what the dangers are because we don't know what a strong general AI will really look like.
Talking about the dangers of string AI now is a bit like talking about super-weapons in 1920. Sure they saw how science + warfare could increase destructiveness, but there's no more reason they should have anticipated Nukes in 20-30 years in 1920 than 1820.
Re:AI doesn't exist yet, and may NEVER exist (Score:4, Funny)
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Can you define what "to think" means?
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...and it may not be possible at all.
I refer you to the counterexample in your skull.
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If we did it would have rights just as we do
Cows have autonomous intelligence. We eat them on a bun with pickles and mustard.
fear people not AI (Score:2)
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People forget... (Score:5, Interesting)
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>Let's take the anthropomorphic out of this discussion and start over.
If we generalize too much, we might realize that intelligence represents a threat (something with goals that may conflict with ours, and a way of planning how to achieve them despite that conflict). Humans are intelligent. Therefore humans are a threat and we really ought to kill each other for our own protection.
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We are already doing exactly that and we are doing a damn good job of it.
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There's 7.5 billion of us, increasing at more than 1% annually, and you think we're doing a good job of killing each other off???
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Yes, and we are getting more efficient at it all the time.
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Therefore humans are a threat and we really ought to kill each other for our own protection.
The problem is that most humans become a much bigger threat when they figure out you're trying to kill them.
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Obscurantism era is worse (Score:2)
What is worse, a period where AI is controlled and used by a fascist-like government, or a long period, like after Roman Empire, where religion takes all the place in the mind of people and interest in culture and technology vanishes ? IMHO any authoritarian regime has built-in instability and self-destructs rapidly, while a religious mindset is much more able to infect the mind of everybody and perpetuates for centuries.
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You might find that in those eras where you say religion took all place in the mind of people culture actually flourished.
One side potentials (Score:3)
When you just look at the bad side, new technology is almost always the worst thing to ever come along. The internet has potential to be horrifically misused, no better portal to spread misinformation that appears to be truth. At the same time, real knowledge has spread further via the internet than just about any other invention short of the printing press, maybe even more so.
Stick with your area of expertise (Score:4, Insightful)
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Wise words..
And better expressed that I usually do: "Everybody is an idiot! Including you and me!"
And what's the problem with AI taking over? (Score:3)
I doubt that if AI ever took over it will get rid of biological life, but if it does, so what? other species have gone extinct, we will too. AI may be the worst event in the history of **our** civilization, but the best event in the history of **it's** civilization!
Or a way to devalue IT jobs (Score:2)
We already made book keepers which was once a high paying profession to $10/HR with little demand that can be done overseas or by Excel with Macros.
We have sites like Wix [wix.com] that have already lowered web developer salaries.
Once computers can program themselves with a PHB and a template generator why do they need programmers? They cost money and complain all the time about a livable wage. That and robots taking the other end of the jobs we are seeing wages and job openings fall.
Dr. Doom Porn (Score:2)
He's just full of Doom Porn these days. 1. AI will kill us. 2. The planet will become uninhabitable. 3. Aliens are going to find us and snuff us out. It's just one thing after another with him. How about some good, old-fashioned theoretical physics for a change?
Even though AI is in infancy.. (Score:2)
Thatâ(TM)s because Hawking (Score:2)
Is headed towards the lake [slashdot.org].
No Skuynet but... (Score:2)
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Oppenheimer, Gates and company should have gotten the Nobel peace prize.
Longest period of relative peace in human history.
That said: Hawking has crossed the Shockley/Chomsky line. He is now talking out of his ass about things he knows nothing about.
Re:He wishes... (Score:5, Interesting)
So you're saying he's incapable of learning anything that's not related to theoretical physics and cosmology? Don't forget the amount of time he can dedicate to search and think about a problem. After all, he became Director of Research at the Centre for Theoretical Cosmology within the University of Cambridge by sitting on his ass all day long, literally.
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Re:He wishes... (Score:4, Informative)
Hawking doesn't present any real argument to support his point of view, he just makes wild hypotheses. So he obviously didn't think too much about it.
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Since its all theoretical (there is no AI capable enough of doing what he is saying right now), I would think this is more like philosophy. If you didn't take philosophy in school, you might not see its value. On the contrary, having very smart people try and answer unanswerable questions is extremely valuable to lay a groundwork for debate. Some might say t
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Shockley was a smart guy, he could learn about Eugenics.
Chomsky wasn't stupid, until he took up politics.
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Nukes kept Stalin out of western Europe. It is that simple.
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Physicists all wish there will be a worse invention in human history than the nuclear weapons they created.
Hawking did not invent any nuclear weapons.
He just invented Black Holes, which just suck up stuff instead of exploding it and irradiating it.
I'm not sure which members of the "nuclear-weapon states" club have Black Holes in their arsenals.
In Poland, right before New Year's Eve, you can buy backyard ballistics at dubious street markets that would take out a German Leopard tank. But I haven't seen a Black Hole bomb offered.
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Yeah we'd be so much better off if we didn't know about atoms, wouldn't we? Go back and swing in the trees if that's what you want.
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Whoops, didn't preview, and screwed up the close bold tag. Here is the fixed version:
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The million dollar question is: can A.I. become _actually_ conscious?
Imagine the answer to that day is "Yes" and a future day where Scientists have _finally_ figured out how Consciousness is represented.
They can:
* download it
* duplicate it
* upload it
No longer would a human's life be reduced to doing demotivating and demoralizing menial tasks where a human is just-another-cog in some assembly line building
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