The Fort Worth Press - How AI could upend the world even more than electricity or the internet

USD -
AED 3.672497
AFN 64.000229
ALL 82.022626
AMD 376.059682
AOA 916.999824
ARS 1387.3213
AUD 1.417203
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.710419
BAM 1.673634
BBD 2.011587
BDT 122.694347
BHD 0.377368
BIF 2968.547431
BMD 1
BND 1.273934
BOB 6.90148
BRL 5.118702
BSD 0.998734
BTN 92.490362
BWP 13.45308
BYN 2.900908
BYR 19600
BZD 2.008703
CAD 1.38313
CDF 2301.000267
CHF 0.790895
CLF 0.022795
CLP 897.079922
CNY 6.83625
CNH 6.83852
COP 3650.02
CRC 464.322236
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.357302
CZK 20.88165
DJF 177.856886
DKK 6.39862
DOP 60.568979
DZD 132.382047
EGP 53.092295
ERN 15
ETB 155.954748
EUR 0.85625
FJD 2.235698
FKP 0.744078
GBP 0.745823
GEL 2.685027
GGP 0.744078
GHS 11.006427
GIP 0.744078
GMD 72.99983
GNF 8763.627651
GTQ 7.640832
GYD 208.952669
HKD 7.834805
HNL 26.522788
HRK 6.450598
HTG 130.987476
HUF 323.238982
IDR 17086.75
ILS 3.067404
IMP 0.744078
INR 92.45655
IQD 1308.425611
IRR 1315000.000076
ISK 122.789862
JEP 0.744078
JMD 157.9096
JOD 0.708972
JPY 159.244038
KES 129.25015
KGS 87.448501
KHR 3993.718899
KMF 424.487821
KPW 899.95413
KRW 1481.325034
KWD 0.30908
KYD 0.832292
KZT 476.261788
LAK 22021.598864
LBP 89447.998186
LKR 315.134608
LRD 183.772405
LSL 16.459121
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.350442
MAD 9.304718
MDL 17.248506
MGA 4172.585531
MKD 52.749575
MMK 2099.780124
MNT 3575.250437
MOP 8.059525
MRU 39.641274
MUR 46.580385
MVR 15.460217
MWK 1731.845488
MXN 17.41235
MYR 3.983029
MZN 63.960554
NAD 16.459121
NGN 1362.670277
NIO 36.754009
NOK 9.509255
NPR 147.983022
NZD 1.71129
OMR 0.384498
PAB 0.998725
PEN 3.380641
PGK 4.323196
PHP 59.878994
PKR 278.577675
PLN 3.64128
PYG 6452.275411
QAR 3.651323
RON 4.3601
RSD 100.481039
RUB 77.628967
RWF 1462.201989
SAR 3.752702
SBD 8.04851
SCR 15.178147
SDG 601.00029
SEK 9.33666
SGD 1.274703
SLE 24.65032
SOS 570.778209
SRD 37.575506
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.965616
SVC 8.738811
SYP 110.553826
SZL 16.460148
THB 32.110491
TJS 9.503158
TMT 3.5
TND 2.912484
TRY 44.58029
TTD 6.774889
TWD 31.772497
TZS 2595.000306
UAH 43.381882
UGX 3680.503855
UYU 40.536031
UZS 12184.87395
VES 474.416904
VND 26325
VUV 119.534712
WST 2.769292
XAF 561.328279
XAG 0.013395
XAU 0.00021
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.800048
XDR 0.698112
XOF 561.328279
XPF 102.054176
YER 238.575032
ZAR 16.474265
ZMK 9001.200029
ZMW 19.051327
ZWL 321.999592
  • CMSD

    0.1750

    22.675

    +0.77%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    12.91

    +0.46%

  • CMSC

    0.1900

    22.48

    +0.85%

  • BCC

    2.4900

    81.72

    +3.05%

  • RIO

    -1.0800

    97.37

    -1.11%

  • RYCEF

    1.8300

    17.08

    +10.71%

  • GSK

    1.0400

    58.41

    +1.78%

  • BCE

    -0.1300

    23.99

    -0.54%

  • BTI

    -1.4900

    58.46

    -2.55%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • AZN

    2.2280

    206.498

    +1.08%

  • VOD

    0.0550

    15.825

    +0.35%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    33.47

    -1.37%

  • BP

    0.0350

    45.925

    +0.08%

  • NGG

    0.8900

    90.85

    +0.98%

How AI could upend the world even more than electricity or the internet
How AI could upend the world even more than electricity or the internet / Photo: © AFP/File

How AI could upend the world even more than electricity or the internet

The rise of artificial general intelligence -- now seen as inevitable in Silicon Valley -- will bring change that is "orders of magnitude" greater than anything the world has yet seen, observers say. But are we ready?

Text size:

AGI -- defined as artificial intelligence with human cognitive abilities, as opposed to more narrow artificial intelligence, such as the headline-grabbing ChatGPT -- could free people from menial tasks and usher in a new era of creativity.

But such a historic paradigm shift could also threaten jobs and raise insurmountable social issues, experts warn.

Previous technological advances from electricity to the internet ignited powerful social change, says Siqi Chen, chief executive of San Francisco startup Runway.

"But what we're looking at now is intelligence itself... This is the first time we're able to create intelligence itself and increase its amount in the universe," he told AFP.

Change, as a result, will be "orders of magnitude greater than every other technological change we've ever had in history."

And such an exciting, frightening shift is a "double-edged sword," Chen said, envisioning using AGI to tackle climate change, for example, but also warning that it is a tool that we want to be as "steerable as possible."

It was the release of ChatGPT late last year that brought the long dreamt of idea of AGI one giant leap closer to reality.

OpenAI, the company behind the generative software that churns out essays, poems and computing code on command, this week released an even more powerful version of the tech that operates it -- GPT-4.

It says the technology will not only be able to process text but also images, and produce more complex content such as legal complaints or video games.

As such it "exhibits human-level performance" on some benchmarks, the company said.

- Goodbye to 'drudgery' -

The success of OpenAI, backed by Microsoft, has ignited an arms race of sorts in Silicon Valley as tech giants seek to push their generative AI tools to the next level -- though they remain wary of chatbots going off the rails.

Already, AI-infused digital assistants from Microsoft and Google can summarize meetings, draft emails, create websites, craft ad campaigns and more -- giving us a glimpse of what AGI will be capable of in the future.

"We spend too much time consumed by the drudgery," said Jared Spataro, Microsoft corporate vice president.

With artificial intelligence Spataro wants to "rediscover the soul of work," he said during a Microsoft presentation on Thursday.

Artificial intelligence can also cut costs, some suggest.

British landscape architect Joe Perkins tweeted that he used GPT-4 for a coding project, which a "very good" developer had told him would cost 5,000 pounds ($6,000) and take two weeks.

"GPT-4 delivered the same in 3 hours, for $0.11," he tweeted. "Genuinely mind boggling."

But that raises the question of the threat to human jobs, with entrepreneur Chen acknowledging that the technology could one day build a startup like his -- or an even better version.

"How am I going to make a living and not be homeless?" he asked, adding that he was counting on solutions to emerge.

- Existential questions -

Ubiquitous artificial intelligence also puts a question mark over creative authenticity as songs, images, art and more are cranked out by software instead of people.

Will humans shun education, relying instead on software to do the thinking for them?

And, who is to be trusted to make the AI unbiased, accurate, and adaptable to different countries and cultures?

AGI is "probably coming at us faster than we can process," says Sharon Zhou, co-founder of a generative AI company.

The technology raises an existential question for humanity, she told AFP.

"If there is going to be something more powerful than us and more intelligent than us, what does that mean for us?" Zhou asked.

"And do we harness it? Or does it harness us?"

OpenAI says it plans to build AGI gradually with the aim of benefitting all of humanity, but it has conceded that the software has safety flaws.

Safety is a "process," OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever said in an interview with the MIT Technology Review, adding that it would be "highly desirable" for companies to "come up with some kind of process that allows for slower releases of models with these completely unprecedented capabilities."

But for now, says Zhou, slowing down is just not part of the ethos.

"The power is concentrated around those who can build this stuff. And they make the decisions around this, and they are inclined to move fast," she says.

The international order itself could be at stake, she suggests.

"The pressure between US and China has been immense," Zhou says, adding that the artificial intelligence race invokes the Cold War era.

"There is definitely the risk with AGI that if one country figures that out faster, will they dominate?" she asks.

"And so I think the fear is, don't stop because we can't lose."

M.Delgado--TFWP