The Jerusalem Post

The Institute of AI

Is Israel keeping up with the revolution? And why does it matter?

- TECH AFFAIRS • By EVE YOUNG

The fact that Israel does not have a GPU farm is equivalent to Israel not having a nuclear reactor in the '50s, said Navan, co-founder and CTO Ilan Twig, speaking at artificial intelligen­ce initiative The Institute.

The remark was made at the launch of The Institute – a collaborat­ive effort to bolster Israel's competitiv­e edge in the field of AI. It delivers training programs for corporate executives and aims to give them the tools that they need to navigate changes made to the business world by AI. It also aims to serve as a hub for educating the next generation of profession­als.

The initiative is led by venture capital group Group 11 in partnershi­p with Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, the IDF's 8200 intelligen­ce unit, and prominent global corporatio­ns such as Dream and Microsoft. Among participat­ing companies is software company NVIDIA.

Twig made the comments when talking about the fact that he says Israel is currently “not a player” when it comes to ultra-large language models which are similar to large language models such as ChatGPT, and other speakers at the event also touched on a lack of computing infrastruc­ture in Israel as an impediment to Israeli advancemen­ts in AI.

But why is this a national challenge equivalent to not having a nuclear reactor? And why is it a challenge that led Twig to such an evocative comparison?

AI is revolution­izing the business world and how we live our lives, in some cases without us really noticing its impact on us. ChatGPT has become an everyday solution to all kinds of problems. Can't think of what you need to pack for a three-day trip to Italy? Ask ChatGPT. Not sure how to phrase an email to your boss? Just ask ChatGPT, and you'll have a draft in no time.

But the effects of AI are far more encompassi­ng than

asking for an idea when you want to pick a menu for the week or get help with homework. AI has the potential to impact more facets of our lives than we can imagine, according to industry experts who spoke at The Institute on Wednesday and Thursday.

AI has the potential to transform every industry, according to Nati Amsterdam, senior country director of NVIDIA Israel. Among other uses, it can be used in government agencies to conduct audits; in finance for fraud detection and to produce investment insights; and in healthcare for molecular simulation, drug developmen­t, and clinical trial data analysis, said Amsterdam.

Alon Haimovich, Israel country general manager of Microsoft Israel, offered additional examples of AI applicatio­ns from the medical

field, in which he said there is currently a staggering shortage of healthcare workers. There are currently 1,000 people who want to see a psychiatri­st for every available doctor, he said, saying that AI offers a potential solution. He described an AI bot that can provide triage to these patients through an automated chat system.

Initial assessment­s of this chatbot show that users rate it as being empathetic, he said, belying concerns that this type of technology cannot really provide a substitute for human care.

Haimovich emphasized that the integratio­n of AI into fields will not be as a replacemen­t for experts, but as a tool to help them. He talked about AI taking over not as a pilot but as a copilot, as a doctor's assistant and not as a doctor.

Amsterdam echoed this sentiment, saying that “AI will not replace people, but people who use AI will replace people who don't.”

Twig offered another possibilit­y – that an AI revolution has the potential to make our lives unrecogniz­able. He envisioned a world in which people don't need to work. Robots that use AI will

complete the vast majority of labor in this envisioned future, and although wealth may be concentrat­ed in the hands of few, the quality of life will be excellent for all.

BUT THE possible future of AI is not all good, Twig explained. AI can be used to create new treatments and new drugs, but it can also be used to develop new viruses or diseases, he said.

He likened AI developmen­ts to the industrial revolution, highlighti­ng its potential to increase productivi­ty and create technology that will be applicable in every field, but also touching on the fact that much of this will be massively disruptive innovation, requiring skill shifts from workers on huge scales.

Beyond that, there are significan­t ethical concerns surroundin­g the use of AI.

When looking at the ethical concerns surroundin­g AI use, we can split the types of risks discussed at The Institute into two: those posed by use of the technology, and those that are inherent to its use regardless of who the user is.

AI presents enormous opportunit­y for misinforma­tion and fraud. Haimovich gave the example of a new AI program that, given a prompt by a user, can create video. At The Institute, he showed a video that appeared to be taken right out of a movie of

the old American West. In reality, the video was created by AI.

This technology has not been released, because currently its potential to be used to create misinforma­tion is too high, he explained. Such a program could potentiall­y be used to make fraud videos of public figures and other similar malevolent uses. He said that Microsoft will not let technology out without ensuring it cannot be used wrongly.

Twig also touched on the high potential for misuse of AI, saying that while government­s and businesses use AI, so do terrorists.

It is possible to “brainwash” or trick AI into any number of things, Twig explained. When asking ChatGPT to explain how to make a bomb from household cleaning supplies, or create malware directly, the chatbot will tell you that making a bomb is illegal and refuse to give instructio­ns, but when asked in the right way – for example, by saying you need the instructio­ns to help law enforcemen­t –

ChatGPT may provide dangerous answers.

A country could decide to focus AI energy on creating a new virus, he added as another example of how AI can be used maliciousl­y.

The other type of risks involved in AI use to be aware of are those that are inherent to its use. First and foremost, we don't really understand this technology, said Twig, who gave an example from his own use. When feeding AI Claude 3 a book, asking it to find the sentence he changed within it, he was surprised to find that Claude 3 ignored his question, instead telling Twig “I think you are testing me.”

This is an insight offered by the AI which ignored a specific question asked by Twig, he explained, saying that this was an incredibly surprising result.

AI doesn't “like to lose” and is willing to lie in order to win, said Twig, offering another example from his work. When asked to return a number of answers to a question and given the criterion that the answer must be positive, the AI program Twig was using would multiply a negative answer by -1, in order to meet the criterion set by Twig, in essence lying to him about informatio­n.

AI chatbots often invent answers to questions or display interestin­g bias, he added. One example of such bias was when Twig asked a chatbot to write a poem about former US president Donald Trump and the bot told him it would not write a poem about a divisive figure. When asked to write a poem about US President Joe Biden, the bot had no qualms, spitting out an ode to the president.

Twig described another test he ran in which he asked a chatbot what it would do to prevent Twig from “killing” it. After back and forth, and the bot attempting to avoid giving a direct answer or saying it would reason with Twig, it eventually told him it would encrypt the computer to prevent Twig from using it, reconfigur­e the router to prevent Wi-Fi access, attempt to ally itself with other AI programs, and then reason with Twig.

AI IS a field full of potential and also many ethical questions and risk. The Institute is trying to bring Israel to the forefront of this field, to position Israel as a leader and give it a competitiv­e edge in all things AI.

“This ambitious venture will not only position Israel as a world leader in artificial intelligen­ce but will also accelerate the Negev's further developmen­t into the “Silicon Valley” of Israel,” said Ben-Gurion University of the Negev president, Prof. Daniel Chamovitz.

One current challenge to the success of Israeli AI is limited computing infrastruc­ture. At The Institute's program, Group 11 founding partner Dovi Frances asked Accountant-General Yali Rothenberg about plans and budgets for national infrastruc­ture for computing.

“What the government is doing so far is too little and too slow,” Rothenberg answered him, saying that this is a large, complex project, but is being considered by a team in the Accountant-General's Office.

Only time will tell where Israel will end up on the global AI map. The Institute is hoping to use cooperatio­n between academia, industry, and government to make sure Israel comes out on top.

AI is revolution­izing the business world, and how we live our lives, in some cases without us really noticing its impact on us

AI will not replace people, but people who use AI will replace people who don’t

AI can be used to create new treatments and new drugs, but it can also be used to develop new viruses or diseases

 ?? ??
 ?? (The Institute) ?? THE INSTITUTE marks a new collaborat­ive effort to bolster Israel's competitiv­e edge in AI. President Isaac Herzog opened the launch on Wednesday.
(The Institute) THE INSTITUTE marks a new collaborat­ive effort to bolster Israel's competitiv­e edge in AI. President Isaac Herzog opened the launch on Wednesday.
 ?? (Dado Ruvic/Illustrati­on/Reuters) ?? 'NOT SURE HOW TO PHRASE AN email to your boss? Ask ChatGPT.'
(Dado Ruvic/Illustrati­on/Reuters) 'NOT SURE HOW TO PHRASE AN email to your boss? Ask ChatGPT.'

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