Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

AI is more profound than fire: Pichai

- Bloomberg

LONDON/BRUSSELS: Google’s chief executive officer (CEO) has left no doubt about how important he thinks artificial intelligen­ce will be to humanity.

“AI is one of the most profound things we’re working on as humanity. It’s more profound than fire or electricit­y,” Alphabet Inc. CEO Sundar Pichai said in an interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d on Wednesday.

Alphabet, which owns Google, has had to grapple with its role in the developmen­t of AI, including managing employee revolts against its work on the technology for the US government. In 2018, a group of influentia­l software engineers successful­ly delayed the developmen­t of a security feature that would’ve helped the company win military contracts.

Google has issued a set of AI principles that prohibit weapons work, but doesn’t rule out selling to the military. It has also pledged not to renew its Project Maven contract, which involves using artificial intelligen­ce to analyze drone footage.

Pichai, who’s led Google since 2015, took control of Alphabet after founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin stepped down from day-to-day involvemen­t last month.

“AI is no different from the climate,” Pichai said. “You can’t get safety by having one country or a set of countries working on it. You need a global framework.”

Current frameworks to regulate the technology in the U.S. and Europe are a “great start,” and countries will have to work together on internatio­nal agreements, similar to the Paris climate accord, to ensure it’s developed responsibl­y, Pichai said.

Technology such as facial recognitio­n can be used for good, such as finding missing people, or have “negative consequenc­es,” such as mass surveillan­ce, he said. Keith Enright, Google’s chief privacy officer, also spoke about the potential of artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning to continue developing new technologi­es and services using a minimum amount of customer data.

“We’re right now really focused on doing more with less data,” Enright said at a data-protection conference in Brussels on Wednesday. “This is counter-intuitive to a lot of people, because the popular narrative is that companies like ours are trying to amass as much data as possible.”

Holding on to data that isn’t delivering value for users is “a risk,” he said.

Powerful new European Union rules took effect across in May, giving privacy watchdogs the power to fine companies as much as 4% of annual global sales for serious violations.

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