The Sunday Telegraph

Google has sent internet into ‘spiral of decline’, says AI expert

- By Matthew Field

GOOGLE has plunged the internet into a “spiral of decline”, the co-founder of the company’s artificial intelligen­ce (AI) lab has claimed.

Mustafa Suleyman, the British entreprene­ur who co-founded DeepMind, said: “The business model that Google had broke the internet.”

He said search results had become plagued with “clickbait” to keep people “addicted and absorbed on the page as long as possible”.

Informatio­n online is “buried at the bottom of a lot of verbiage and guff”, Mr Suleyman argued, so websites can “sell more adverts”, fuelled by Google’s technology. Mr Suleyman was one of three people who set up pioneering AI lab DeepMind in London 2010. The company was bought by Google for £400m and it has become the cornerston­e of the search giant’s AI operations.

Mr Suleyman, 39, quit Google 18 months ago and has since set up a rival venture, Inflection AI. The company is developing a conversati­onal chatbot, similar to ChatGPT, amid a race by AI companies to usurp Google’s dominance of the web.

The entreprene­ur has developed a chatbot called Pi, which he says can act as a kind of AI confidante or coach. He has raised more than $1.5bn (£1.2bn) for the new technology. Mr Suleyman issued the criticism of his former employer as he told The Daily Telegraph about plans for a new internatio­nal body to monitor AI threats.

Mr Suleyman, along with billionair­e former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt, plan to present proposals for an Internatio­nal Panel on AI Safety at Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s global summit on the technology next month.

The DeepMind co-founder said the panel could be “modelled on the IPCC” – the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change – to “establish the scientific consensus around the current capabiliti­es” of AI.

Mr Suleyman said the IPCC, which was first set up in 1988, was a “good inspiratio­n” for establishi­ng a “rigorous body” for making prediction­s about AI risks. Other backers of the plan include Reid Hoffman, the billionair­e LinkedIn founder, and Florentino Cuéllar, president of the Carnegie think tank.

The AI panel would provide government­s with regular assessment­s on the level of danger posed by the technology. The UK’s AI Safety Summit is due to take place at Bletchley Park, Buckingham­shire, and is expected to gather world leaders and tech entreprene­urs to address the challenges of “frontier AI” that might cause “significan­t harm, including the loss of life”.

The two-day summit on Nov 1 and 2 is expected to be attended by top lobbyists from the likes of Meta and Google. Kamala Harris, the US vice-president, is expected to attend, while a Chinese delegation has been invited.

The leaders will try to find common ground on tackling AI risks. Officials are also understood to be considerin­g setting up an internatio­nal institute for AI safety. Michelle Donelan, the Technology Secretary, said the conference would “consider the biggest risks and biggest opportunit­ies that come from frontier AI”, bringing together “companies, countries and also experts”.

Concern about the technology has been sparked by the overnight success of ChatGPT, seen as a wake-up call for world leaders about the speed at which the technology was being developed.

A wave of chatbots, built on “large language models”, can answer questions and have online conversati­ons in an almost human way. They can write emails, prompting concerns they could create upheaval in the jobs market.

Google was approached for comment.

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