The Jerusalem Post

Experts raise fears of ‘extinction risk’ from AI

- • By SUPANTHA MUKHERJEE

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) – Top artificial intelligen­ce executives including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman on Tuesday joined experts and professors in raising the “risk of extinction from AI,” which they urged policymake­rs to equate at par with risks posed by pandemics and nuclear war.

“Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war,” over 350 signatorie­s wrote in a letter published by the nonprofit Center for AI Safety (CAIS).

Altman was joined by the CEOs of AI firms DeepMind and Anthropic and executives from Microsoft and Google.

Also among them were Geoffrey Hinton and Yoshua Bengio – two of the three so-called “godfathers of AI” who received the 2018 Turing Award for their work on deep learning – and professors from institutio­ns ranging from Harvard to China’s Tsinghua University.

CAIS singled out Meta, where the third godfather of AI, Yann LeCun, works, for not signing the letter.

The letter coincided with the US-EU Trade and Technology Council meeting in Sweden where politician­s are expected to talk about regulating AI.

Elon Musk and other AI experts and industry leaders were the first to cite potential risks to society in April.

Recent developmen­ts in AI have created tools supporters say can be used in applicatio­ns from medical diagnostic­s to writing legal briefs, but this has sparked fears the technology could lead to privacy violations, power misinforma­tion campaigns, and lead to issues with “smart machines” thinking for themselves.

AI pioneer Hinton earlier told Reuters that AI could pose a “more urgent” threat to humanity than climate change.

 ?? SAM ALTMAN (Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters) ??
SAM ALTMAN (Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel