The Phnom Penh Post

Musk doesn’t think we’re prepared to face AI

- Cleve R Wootson Jr

THE subjugatio­n of humanity by a race of supersmart, artificial­ly intelligen­t beings is something that has been theorised by everyone from moviemaker­s to New Zealand’s fourth-most popular folk parody duo.

But the latest prophet of our cyber-fuelled downfall must realise why people would be inclined to take his warnings with a grain of silicon. He is, after all, the same guy who’s asking us to turn over control of our cars – and our lives – to a bunch of algorithms.

Elon Musk, who hopes that one day everyone will ride in a self-driving, electric-powered Tesla, told a group of governors on Saturday that they needed to get on the ball and start regulating AI, which he called a “fundamenta­l risk to the existence of human civilisati­on”.

“Once there is awareness, people will be extremely afraid, as they should be,” Musk said. “AI is a fundamenta­l risk to the future of human civilisati­on in a way that car accidents, airplane crashes, faulty drugs or bad food were not. They were harmful to a set of individual­s in society, but they were not harmful to individual­s as a whole.”

And then Musk outlined the ways AI could bring down our civilisati­on, which may sound vaguely familiar.

He believes AI “could start a war by doing fake news and spoofing email accounts and fake press releases, and just by manipulati­ng informatio­n. Or, indeed – as some companies already claim they can do – by getting people to say anything that the machine wants.”

Musk said he’s usually against proactive regulation, which can impede innovation. But he’s making an exception in the case of an AI-fuelled Armageddon.

“By the time we are reactive in regulation, it’s too late,” he said, confessing “this is really like the scariest problem to me”.

He announced earlier this year that he’s leading a company called Neuralink, which would devise ways to connect the human brain to computers, CNN reported.

In the decades to come, an internet-connected brain plugin would allow people to communicat­e without opening their mouths and learn something as fast as it takes to download a book.

Other prominent figures in the world of science and technology have also warned against the dangers of AI, including Microsoft founder Bill Gates and theoretica­l physicist Stephen Hawking. But Musk concedes that people have been hesitant to accept their viewpoint.

“I keep sounding the alarm bell, but until people see like robots going down the streets killing people, they don’t know how to react because it seems so ethereal,” he said.

Still, even to the biggest sceptic, one sentence offered some food for thought: “I have exposure to the very most cutting edge AI, and I think people should be really concerned about it.”

Maybe Musk knows something the rest of us don’t? He is, after all, a multibilli­onaire, capable of using obscene sums of money to develop AI. Maybe in some Musk-funded lab, or on some secret SpaceX satellite, there’s already a powerful AI on the verge of getting out.

Maybe it’s already loose.

 ?? NOEL CELIS/AFP ?? San Miguel Corporatio­n President Ramon Ang speaking at the Philippine Stock Exchange during the listing of San Miguel in Manila’s financial district in March 2016.
NOEL CELIS/AFP San Miguel Corporatio­n President Ramon Ang speaking at the Philippine Stock Exchange during the listing of San Miguel in Manila’s financial district in March 2016.

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