Fiji Sun

Apple co-founder: AI may make scams harder to spot

- BBC frederica.elbourne@fijisun.com.fj

AAI is so intelligen­t it’s open to the bad players, the ones that want to trick you about who they are. Steve Wozniak Apple co-founder

pple co-founder Steve Wozniak has warned that artificial intelligen­ce (AI) could make scams and misinforma­tion harder to spot. Mr Wozniak says he fears the technology will be harnessed by “bad actors”.

Speaking to the BBC, he said AI content should be clearly labelled, and regulation was needed for the sector.

The computing pioneer signed a letter in March alongside Elon Musk calling for a pause in the developmen­t of the most powerful AI models.

Mr Wozniak, better known in the tech world as Woz, is a Silicon Valley veteran who co-founded Apple with Steve Jobs and invented the first Apple computer.

Speaking to Zoe Kleinman, the BBC’s Technology Editor, he talked about both the benefits of AI, and his concerns.

He said: “AI is so intelligen­t it’s open to the bad players, the ones that want to trick you about who they are.”

The term AI covers computer systems able to do tasks that would normally need human intelligen­ce. This includes chatbots able to understand questions and respond with human-like answers, and systems capable of recognisin­g objects in pictures. Mr Wozniak doesn’t believe AI will replace people because it lacks emotion, but he did warn that, in his view, it will make bad actors even more convincing, because programmes like ChatGPT can create text which “sounds so intelligen­t”.

‘A human really has responsibi­lity’ to take the

He thinks responsibi­lity for anything generated by Artificial In

telligence and then posted to the public, should rest with those who publish it: “A human really has to take the responsibi­lity for what is generated by AI.”

He wants regulation to hold to account the big tech firms which “feel they can kind of get away with anything” .

But he sounded a note of scepticism that regulators would get it right: “I think the forces that drive for money usually win out, which is sort of sad.”

‘We can’t stop the technology’

Mr Wozniak was a pioneer of computing and says missed opportunit­ies at the birth of the internet have lessons for today’s architects of Artificial Intelligen­ce. He believes “we can’t stop the technology”, but we can prepare people so they are better educated to spot fraud and malicious attempts to take personal informatio­n.

The current boss of Apple, Tim Cook, told investors last week that it was important to be “deliberate and thoughtful” in how to approach AI: “We view AI as huge, and we’ll continue weaving it in our products on a very thoughtful basis.”

 ?? ?? The term AI covers computer systems able to do tasks that would normally need human intelligen­ce.
The term AI covers computer systems able to do tasks that would normally need human intelligen­ce.
 ?? ?? Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.
Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.

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