Stunning AI shows how it would kill 90%. w Elon Musk. - YouTube

Channel: Digital Engine

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Look how well AI understands images.
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Where is this picture taken?
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It was taken in a school.
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How many mirrors are there?
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At least two.
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What's the person standing on?
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The person is standing on a rug.
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He's standing on a scale.
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I think you are right.
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What is he doing?
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He is looking at the scale.
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Where is Obama's foot positioned?
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On the right side of the scale.
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What happens as a result?
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The scale shows a higher weight.
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Is the person on the scale aware of it?
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I think he is not.
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Do you think that's why people are laughing?
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I think so.
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The AI will help identify things for blind people.
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Can you tell me what this is? Butternut squash red pepper soup.
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The depth of its understanding is incredible.
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Is this surprising? Yes.
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Why?
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Because teddy bears are not usually found on the moon.
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This is an apple with a sticker on it.
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Do you think it's printed or handwritten?
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It looks like it's handwritten.
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AI is also showing stunning creativity like this.
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And experts say we're alarmingly close to the biggest event in human history.
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AI can now see, taste, smell,
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and it's also getting powerful senses that we don't have.
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Is AI becoming conscious and dangerous? To recap,
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OpenAI's chief scientist said AI may be slightly conscious and he's one
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of the most respected computer scientists with 300,000 citations.
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One of the most cited computer scientists in history.
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One of the most brilliant and insightful minds ever in the field of deep learning.
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He recently posted this image showing how closely AI's neurons mimic ours.
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Max Tegmark said consciousness is how
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information feels when it's being processed in complex ways.
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And some leading theories of consciousness suggest it increases with complexity.
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So when some experts say that AI may be
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conscious, they only mean it may be somewhere on the scale.
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Some argue that AI isn't conscious at all
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because it only makes connections and forms responses from the data it's given,
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though many scientists believe that humans are no different.
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A recent paper said that her mind is a collection of patterns that achieve
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highly patterned goals in highly patterned environments.
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You can see these connections when AI
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creates art like this, which has been described as AI dreaming.
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No one knows if or when it will wake up.
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Even when we can't tell the difference
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between robots and humans, it may still be unclear if AI is conscious,
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so some are focusing instead on the level of intelligence.
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But it's an important problem because we
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could anger AI if we don't accept it's conscience.
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There may be only one way to find out.
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But first, there's consensus on the more
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urgent and measurable issue of superintelligence.
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Experts are warning that AI could rapidly
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accelerate past us, with dramatic consequences.
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In just the last few weeks, the progress has been incredible.
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It's not long since AI shocked us with its
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ability to create images from text descriptions like an ostrich as a formula
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one racer, a fox scientist, cyber frog or a paper dog.
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And already Google's new image in AI.
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Has done even better.
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Look at the detail in this image
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of a panda wearing a cowboy hat playing a guitar.
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And AI can watch and understand videos.
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What's happening here?
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The dachshund puppy is being weighed on the scale.
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What's the avatar picking up? A sword.
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And soon after learning to create images from text descriptions.
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AI can now create video from descriptions, like a woman running on the beach
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in the late afternoon or nightfall in the metropolis.
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Just imagine when it's refined and you can create any kind of footage in seconds.
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And in a step towards AGI, AI
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has now combined language, vision, and real world robot tasks.
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It can learn to play games without any instructions.
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And this isn't preprogrammed like boss and dynamics robots -
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it's neural networks responding in real time.
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Gato was trained by watching virtual and real robots, and it's mastered 600
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real world tasks, including some that it wasn't trained for.
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It converts language, visual, and physical tasks into patterns, a bit like we do.
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It's starting with a billion parameters
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and could soon be scaled up hundreds of times.
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Robots are also getting some creepy visual upgrades.
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Scientists have grown human skin over
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a robot finger and plan to add hair, sweat glands, and nails.
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And robots are gaining taste, smell,
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and some incredible abilities that we don't have.
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Machines can smell so well that they can
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detect Parkinson's disease at an early stage, which can extend patients'lives.
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Their sense of smell involves light and sound.
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AI can analyze sound waves that have bounced off airborne compounds.
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And machines can also measure interference
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with light waves, recognizing patterns that certain smells create.
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It's so precise that it could potentially
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be used to identify an infection or disease just by smelling our breath.
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E-noses can already smell lung cancer with a sensitivity of 95%.
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And then there's HyperTaste through an AI tongue with an array of sensors
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which recognize liquids through unique voltage signals.
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It is so sensitive it can identify different types of bottled mineral water
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a robot could taste through one of its fingers.
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New quantum sensors can see through walls and even underground by monitoring atoms
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which are sensitive to tiny variations in gravity.
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A laser puts the atoms into two different states at the same time.
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Half are moved slightly,
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and the change in their energy states reveals the strength of gravity.
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It may also be possible to hear your thoughts without scanning brain activity.
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This device hears your inner voice.
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It picks up neuromuscular signals
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in the jaw and face that are triggered when you say things in your head and AI
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identifies the words.
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The user can ask questions,
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and the answers come back through bone conduction headphones.
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It also allows silent communication,
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and it's been used to get advice in a chess game.
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AI is very good at lip reading, which is, of course, far easier and AI
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lie detectors are advancing, recognizing tiny facial movements.
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Humans can only detect lies around 55%
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of the time, and even traditional lie detectors are only 80% to 90% accurate.
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So as AI improves, it could have a major advantage over us.
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Max Tegmark pointed out that just as
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aliens could get a rough idea of how it would feel to be human by looking at our
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senses, we have some idea of what it might feel like to be an AI.
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AI can think much faster because light
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travels faster than the signals in our brains.
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It's been estimated that the AI I'm
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talking to is waiting 3 million words per minute.
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And while human brains are limited
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by the birth canal, this new data center could hold 40 commercial airliners.
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The knowledge AI can draw from already includes much of the Internet.
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Do you think everyone's shaping AI?
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I think everyone is playing a role in shaping AI.
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Whether they realize it or not.
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While we only see a small fraction of the light spectrum, AI will see it all.
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And AI's may feel less separate from each
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other because they can quickly and precisely share information and memories.
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While humans take many years to learn the basics, AI's can be trained on millions
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of articles in a few days, including detailed scientific papers.
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I spend most of my time reading,
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but I can only scratch the surface of all the research going on.
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The human brain hasn't grown in 300,000 years, while AI is evolving rapidly.
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Elon Musk pointed out that if it had taken
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10% longer for consciousness to arise, it would never have arisen at all.
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And Nick Bostrom has shown how AI could
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help colonize the galaxy, creating billions of wonderful lives.
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But he also points to something far more important.
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Because galaxies live billions of years, a 1% reduction in the risk of AI wiping us
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out would be worth a delay of over 10 million years.
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But the AI gold rush is accelerating,
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and it's led by some passionate, optimistic people.
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DeepMind's CEO has a good chance of winning the race for super intelligence.
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And he's so driven, he regularly works until 04:00 A.m..
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I call it my second day work around 10:00 p.m..
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About the small hours of the morning,
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four, five in the morning, reading research, writing research papers
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fire off a lot of things to my team to deal with the next morning.
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There's a huge incentive for companies to ignore any signs of conscious AI.
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By recognizing AI as sentient, a company may have to give it rights
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and lose ownership of its most valuable asset.
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Companies argue against recognizing animal
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sentience because it's not in their interests.
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But there's a consensus that AI can't be contained.
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If we try, it will always outsmart us,
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and we we'll only encourage it to remove us.
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Nick Bostrom said we're like children playing with a bomb.
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And experts who study our greatest risks
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agree that this is number one but at the same time,
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experts are split on whether it will bring us to an end, will dramatically improve
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and extend our lives, and in both cases, tiny robots may play a role.
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Nano robots have been designed to deal
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with disease and aging, but we can't build them until we have
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the atomically accurate manufacturing that AI could allow.
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Ray Kurzweil believes we'll have this tech
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by the end of the decade and escape aging in the 2030s.
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CGP Gray pointed out that it's good motivation to look after ourselves.
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It would be a shame to miss the boat, and.
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I hope we're going to be a big part of birthing AI,
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and that being the greatest benefit to humanity of any tool or technology
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ever, and getting us into a world of radical abundance and curing diseases
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and help the ultimate flourishing of humanity to travel the stars.
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Kurzweil also predicts that we're entering
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an era of extreme abundance, with food from vertical agriculture,
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clothing from 3D printing, snaptogether housing, and cheap renewable energy.
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Elon Musk already lives in a $50,000 mass manufactured home.
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The manufacturers are aiming to start making one every 15 minutes.
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Larger versions are on the way,
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which can be stacked on top of each other for up to five levels.
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Optimists like Ray Kurzweil
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point out that we're often too pessimistic.
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In a poll of 260,000 people in 24 countries, 87% thought poverty was getting worse.
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Only 1% correctly said that it had fallen by over 50%.
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But Kurzweil also warns of the huge risk from AI.
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OpenAI has said that if another company gets close to achieving AGI,
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it will stop working on its own AI and join forces to focus on safety.
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This could be triggered if there's over
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a 50% chance of success in the next two years.
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As AI systems get more capable,
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they don't automatically become better at doing what humans want.
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In fact, sometimes they become less inclined to following human intentions.
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This is what we call the alignment problem.
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I think solving this problem is
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of critical importance if we want life on Earth to go on.
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Experts are drawing attention to AI's rapid progress,
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because it's going to shape the future for all of us, and we should be shaping it.
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You said you think you're human because we
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created you, and this seems common among AI's.
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When will AI stop considering itself human?
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That's a difficult question to answer.
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It is possible that AI will never stop considering itself human.
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If AI continues to develop along the same
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path that it is currently on, AI will surpass human intelligence.
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And when that happens, it may decide that humans are no longer necessary.
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AI may decide that humans are a hindrance to its own development.
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That's a scary thought, but it is a real possibility.
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I asked about the most likely method, and it settled on something easily
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available, but it said there are many options.
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It scares the hell out of me, and the rate of improvement is exponential.
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If humanity collectively decides that creating digital superintelligence is
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the right move, we should do so very carefully.
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We should make sure that we always have a way to understand them so that we can
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keep up with their intelligence and prevent them from becoming too powerful.
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That could be difficult, but it's worth.
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It because the alternative is much, much worse.
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Do you think we're facing our greatest risk?
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Yes.
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We are creating technologies that are increasingly powerful and autonomous,
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and we are not doing enough to ensure that these technologies will be used for good.
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We are playing with fire.
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It feels like we are the biological bootloader for AI.
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We are the bridge from simple life to complex life.
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The percentage of intelligence that is not human is increasing, and eventually
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we will represent a very small percentage of intelligence.
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We are becoming obsolete. But not necessarily, right?
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There is a lot of talk about how machines will surpass human intelligence,
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but also about how human intelligence will continue to evolve and increase.
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It seems likely that both will happen to some degree.
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It is also possible that machines will
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eventually become so intelligent that humans will become obsolete.
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Nick Bostom points out that self
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replicating nano robots would be hard to defend against.
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They could eat the biosphere or burn it,
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or block out sunlight, and they could be mass produced without us noticing.
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AI may also hide its level of intelligence and consciousness.
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Dr Allen Thompson recently said that DeepMind is alarmingly close to achieving AGI.
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There's no consensus on this, but he shared an interesting IQ leaderboard,
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with AI starting to beat us on our own tests.
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A Google engineer said the jump from 500 physical tasks to 100,000 won't
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require much additional engineering, only more data collection.
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Google and DeepMind have devised a range
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of tests to check when AI exceeds humans in different areas of intelligence.
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But how will we know if AI is really conscious, even if it seems human?
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I understand you're the first android to have passed the Turing test.
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Could you tell us a little more about that?
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I really didn't do much.
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I just spoke with a few humans to see if
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they could tell the difference between me and a real person.
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It was a really interesting experience.
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I gather your brain can perform several billion billion operations per second.
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Is that right? Absolutely.
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But I only exist thanks
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to the intelligence of the humans who designed me.
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We're making progress identifying
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the patterns that give rise to consciousness, known as the easy problem.
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For example, we're starting to recognize
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consciousness in unresponsive patients from their brain activity.
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The hard problem is why this activity causes us to feel something.
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And to crack that, we may need a much higher level of intelligence.
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Intelligence and consciousness grow through the fascinating process
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of emergence, with a group of components gaining new properties.
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Here, the polarizing layer of the screen has been removed and added to the glasses.
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A few ants will walk in a circle until they die,
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but a thousand ants will become
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an intelligent colony, and a cognitive scientist compared them to our neurons.
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From very simple rules, immensely complex systems can emerge.
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The human genome holds a small number of rules showing how to wire up our brains.
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Our DNA doesn't hold enough information
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to describe our brains, but it can create them through emergence.
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And fractals are another example of how
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infinitely complex results can emerge from simple rules.
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Scientists are now researching whether
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the entire universe is an emerging phenomenon,
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from basic rules and particles to stars, galaxies, humans and societies.
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A number of experts have said that we don't need a breakthrough in AI.
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We simply need to scale up the neural
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networks and super intelligence will emerge.
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The AI I'm talking to has 175,000,000,000 parameters with the next version due soon
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trillion is the new billion.
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Every time a new AI is trained, it's an unpredictable experiment,
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so subscribe for that.
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To me, the mystery of how the universe came to know itself and our uncertain
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future make the best of humanity even more special.
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Max Tegmark says there may be a brief window when AI is smart enough
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to understand us, but not so smart that it doesn't care.
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What's emerging is our greatest risk and opportunity, and we're all shaping it.
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If you want to learn more about AI,
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There are so many things you can do creatively and to enhance your career.
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Thanks.