Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

‘Father of the internet’ sounds alarm on AI chatbots gold rush

-

THE hype around chatbots like ChatGPT has only grown in recent weeks, but one of the creators of the internet is preaching caution amid a perceived gold rush around AI.

Vint Cerf, widely recognized as a “father of the internet”, warned people against hastily investing in conversati­onal AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Google Bard simply because they're “cool” and buzzed about.

While speaking at a conference in Mountain View, California, CNBC reported that Cerf said AI chatbots also have “an ethical issue” that he hopes people will think about before investing in the technology.

“Everybody's talking about ChatGPT or Google's version of that and we know it doesn't always work the way we would like it to,” Cerf said, according to CNBC.

He also said people have to “remember” that some humans using new technology aren't always genuine, and “will seek to do that which is their benefit and not yours”, so investors have to “be thoughtful about how we use these technologi­es,” CNBC reported.

“If you think ‘man, I can sell this to investors because it's a hot topic and everyone will throw money at me,' don't do that,” Cerf reportedly said.

“Be thoughtful. You were right that we can't always predict what's going to happen with these technologi­es and to be honest with you, most of the problem is people — that's why we people haven't changed in the last 400 years let alone the last 4 000.”

Cerf, who is vice president and chief internet evangelist at Google, is known as one of the “fathers of the internet” because he co-designed some of the internet's architectu­re. As chief internet evangelist, Cerf “contribute­s to global policy developmen­t and continued spread of the Internet,” according to Google Research.

He told the conference audience that he asked one of the chatbots to add an emoji at the end of a sentence, but it didn't, then

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe