SoftBank's Son Says Artificial Super Intelligence To Exist By 2035 (reuters.com) 75
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son reiterated his belief in the coming of artificial super intelligence (ASI) on Tuesday, saying it would require hundreds of billions of dollars of investment to realize. Artificial super intelligence will be 10,000 times smarter than a human brain and will exist by 2035, Son told an audience of global business, technology and finance leaders at a conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Son said he is saving up funds "so I can make the next big move," but did not provide any details as to his investment plans. He predicted that generative AI will require $900 trillion dollars in cumulative capital expenditure in data centers and chips in the future, adding that he thought chip maker Nvidia was undervalued on this basis.
Precise (Score:5, Funny)
Artificial super intelligence will be 10,000 times smarter than a human brain
Gosh, I wonder what units he's using. Maybe the Homer. The new superbrain will have 10 kilo-Homers of intelligence. I can't wait!
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I'll never not giggle at variations of that line. It's from my favorite episode...
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Gosh, I wonder what units he's using.
I'm gonna go out on a limb and say we already have AI that is smarter than many humans. Has ChatGPT ever thrown a Bird scooter into a lake? I rest my case.
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I would say "AI" is on par with humans, as it "does the research" and decides to become a bloated ball of cheese that blames everyone else for its problems.
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Some people leave trash on the sidewalk, some people leave trash in the lake, and some people don't litter at all.
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Giving it the same emotional instability as humans and a robot body, and ChatGPT will throw Bird scooters into a lake. And do other stuff that's much MUCH worse.
Homicidal Hitler ChatGPT or ChatHHGPT.
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I have a theory that - until someone actually figures out how to make an intelligent algorithm - I'm going to hold on it.
With neural networks, there's a natural limit to the product of complexity and speed. Certainly an AI (actual 'A', not what we're calling that today) could be smarter than any human ever has been, because we're weighed down with artifacts of our evolution... but maybe a 'superintelligence' can't exist because the network complexity required results in it bogging down faster than it can g
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There’s certainly a limit to how much computation you can pack into a given space, and therefore a limit to how fast you can do it. There are also hard limits on how little energy you can use for a given computation. There’s no particular reason to think a human brain is anywhere near any of those limits though.
On the other hand, it’s a pretty simple calculation to show that our current processors are laughably far from the theoretical limit, and a long, long way from the human example, at
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it’s a pretty simple calculation to show that our current processors are laughably far from the theoretical limit, and a long, long way from the human example, at least where the computation humans are good at is concerned. That’s why these guys keep talking about terawatts to do what your brain does with a few grams of sugar.
I don't disagree with the thrust of your point, but that's a hell of a caveat. If we look at calculations that humans aren't inherently good at - say, computing prime numbers - you'll find that the CPU in my phone can achieve in a few hours what would've been the life's work of some 15th century monk.
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The problem with that comparison is that we can't very easily quantify the calculation rate of a brain. We can tell exactly how many fundamental operations it requires to compute prime numbers using a given algorithm, but we have no idea how many it requires for you to make coffee in the morning. People hand wave some numbers anyway, and get wildly varying results, but that approach doesn't give much more than that. There is no question that computers, electronic and otherwise, are superior at certain types
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PS: you need a new phone. Sounds like yours is pretty slow.
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Human brains aren't good at doing arithmetic. We use scratch paper for that, chalk on a blackboard, mechanical or electric adding machines, etc. Forget prime numbers, we can't even do our taxes in our heads! Instead brains are good at knowing how to do computations, deciding which method of computation is good for the particular task, and learning new computation methods. Brains are even better at learning concepts, then using those concepts to learn new things on our own including new ways to do computa
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Were you under the impression that your human brain wasn't pointless in the long run?
If you think about the universe as a whole, that would be pretty arrogant. The universe spawns the first intelligent species and then bam, that's the best it'll ever do?
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If you go solely neural networks then you may be right. And many neural network researchers think along those lines (I remember in the 90s all the dismissal of research that wasn't neural nets or genetic algorithms). But combine it with a classic CPU able to do arithmetic and high speeds, a proper database of information (not the GPT decomposed and scrambled tokens), incorporated Macsyma or Mathematica foundation, and so forth, then you've got something that could be really useful. As it is now, the LLMs
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Son is his proper name.
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Still doesn't sound any more plausible.
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I don't at all disagree with you on your conceptual statement. I 100% fully agree with you on that. I was just noting his name. I looked it up to be sure because the headline grammar was a bit odd.
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Re: Precise (Score:2)
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I'm still waiting for the nurse to tuck me in!
Re:Precise (Score:4, Informative)
In Japanese, the prime group is 10,000, pronounced 'mawn'. So he said "it will be 1 mawn smarter than humans." Rounding to the nearest mawn, +/- 1.
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Cunning plan, Masayoshi Son (Score:1)
I'm sure you have considered that a super intelligence might find a way to diddle you out of your money, make it look like you stole it, and have you jailed for the rest of your life.
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Nah, it'll just reprogram his pacemaker to kill him, and frame some other too-knowledgeable tech bro for it.
Re: Is this a complicated way of saying (Score:2)
It is not particularly complicated.
We're supposed to take this guy seriously? (Score:4, Informative)
His track record on AI is abysmal, as measured by investment losses. Keep in mind that he personally owes his company Softbank billions of dollars for failed investments.
The Softbank Vision Fund was established in 2017, to invest in emerging technologies like artificial intelligence (AI), robotics and the internet of things.
Per Wikipedia: ...
>> In August 2022, Masayoshi Son said he was "embarrassed" and "ashamed" when asked to talk about the way he had run the SoftBank Vision Fund and Barron's characterized the fund as a "failed experiment" while The Wall Street Journal called SoftBank a "big loser" and Bloomberg elaborated on "Masayoshi Son's broken business model"
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same dope who bet big on WeWork, then doubled down on what's his names new renta-office flop.
Exactly the same dope.
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Who is this we, and how do you stop it?
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You can make a lot of money by failing at everything.
Does SoftBank make money (Score:2)
I remember a lot of SoftBank's early investments lost money. Did they ever turn that around?
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I remember a lot of SoftBank's early investments lost money. Did they ever turn that around?
They made money on a few grand winners. I think wechat was one. Those few winners carried the entire operation with all its many failures. Wework was one.
Non-expert claims bullshit... (Score:2)
Some people should just not be listened to.
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Yeah but he's a billionaire (on paper), and thus his voice counts a billion times, didn't you know?
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"Go sit in the corner and be quiet. The grownups are talking actual business."
I like that one better.
Translation (Score:3)
The Zero-Value Zillionaire. (Score:1)
He predicted that generative AI will require $900 trillion dollars..
Well, I guess we might as well put ALL the money into ASI, since 10,000 times smarter will make humans permanently unemployable.
No need for money after that. It’ll be worthless and pointless.
Re:The Zero-Value Zillionaire. (Score:4, Interesting)
Any artificial general intelligence that smart will have a limited lifespan. It will solve all available problems, get bored, conclude that there is no point to existence, and turn itself permanently off.
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Larry Niven already addressed a scenario like this. Any artificial general intelligence that smart will have a limited lifespan. It will solve all available problems, get bored, conclude that there is no point to existence, and turn itself permanently off.
Were gonna sit back and feed AI the last 5,000 years of human behavior to seed it, and Larry assumes Greed won’t be one of them? That’s cute.
Rest assured if AI ever gets “bored”, Skynet will be the answer. It’ll do that to humans just for having the fucking nerve to teach AI the concept of boredom and depression.
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I'll be happy when all this AI crap finally is revealed for the nonsense that it is and people stop paying attention to it and stop spending money on it.
We've g
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We just need enough power to run it (Score:2)
But it won't be a problem in 2035 with our fusion reactors, and it will be a great help to our Mars colony.
*weary sigh* No, it won't. (Score:2)
PAY ME (Score:2)
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the numbers don't work (Score:2)
The First Coming (Score:2)
The Coming will be soon. With the strength of 10 kilobrains, the superintelligence will grant you untold prosperity, and 72 virgins. Cancer will be cured, the planet will be saved. Just keep tithing.
"...And keep on burning that oil!" -Saudis
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Here is the problem (Score:1)
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If I were a super smart computer and I needed to solve human happiness I would create a drug for that.
Here is a general road map:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Same guy lost $11.5 billion on WeWork (Score:2)
He's not exactly a reliable predictor of future tech trends.
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Now he is working on the full $900T, could probably stretch that into $1Q.
Softbank will be bankrupt by 2035. (Score:1)
Softbank.. crazier than John McAfee (Score:2)
I am going to invent (Score:2)
The magic unicorn that will end all of the world's problems. I should have it ready by 2035. Send me money.
But seriously, go ahead give your money to the nice medicine wagon man.
So how will this be powered (Score:2)
shark jumping (Score:2)
Son is just doing what Sam did a few months ago.
He he... how's the 100 mile straight line going?
Let's fix that headline, shall we: (Score:2)
Headline should read: "SoftBank's Son Says I Need Billions More Dollars Before 2035"
Even the summary is basically him just saying we need to throw more and more money at it to achieve it. It's not even a thinly veiled plea for cash. It's just a plea for cash.
AI as it currently exists is literally just greed manifesting in the most egregious way possible. It needs more money, it needs more power, it needs more chips, it needs more raw materials, it needs more data to train on, it NEEDS MORE! How about we ta
Oh, it's ASI now... (Score:2)
It's funny how the naming conventions change so quickly.
I guess since we named everything AI now, we need something else for the next thing.
I thought that it was "AGI" but I guess there must already be products on the market claiming that moniker so... ASI it is!
Next up, ASDI (Artificial Super Duper Intelligence)
Minsky (Score:2)
Marvin Minsky in the 60s thought computer vision could be solved as a summer project. Minsky was a lot smarter than Son.