Current:Home > FinanceExperts issue a dire warning about AI and encourage limits be imposed -USAMarket
Experts issue a dire warning about AI and encourage limits be imposed
View
Date:2025-04-26 00:22:10
A statement from hundreds of tech leaders carries a stark warning: artificial intelligence (AI) poses an existential threat to humanity. With just 22 words, the statement reads, "Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war."
Among the tech leaders, CEOs and scientists who signed the statement that was issued Tuesday is Scott Niekum, an associate professor who heads the Safe, Confident, and Aligned Learning + Robotics (SCALAR) lab at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Niekum tells NPR's Leila Fadel on Morning Edition that AI has progressed so fast that the threats are still uncalculated, from near-term impacts on minority populations to longer-term catastrophic outcomes. "We really need to be ready to deal with those problems," Niekum said.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Interview Highlights
Does AI, if left unregulated, spell the end of civilization?
"We don't really know how to accurately communicate to AI systems what we want them to do. So imagine I want to teach a robot how to jump. So I say, "Hey, I'm going to give you a reward for every inch you get off the ground." Maybe the robot decides just to go grab a ladder and climb up it and it's accomplished the goal I set out for it. But in a way that's very different from what I wanted it to do. And that maybe has side effects on the world. Maybe it's scratched something with the ladder. Maybe I didn't want it touching the ladder in the first place. And if you swap out a ladder and a robot for self-driving cars or AI weapon systems or other things, that may take our statements very literally and do things very different from what we wanted.
Why would scientists have unleashed AI without considering the consequences?
There are huge upsides to AI if we can control it. But one of the reasons that we put the statement out is that we feel like the study of safety and regulation of AI and mitigation of the harms, both short-term and long-term, has been understudied compared to the huge gain of capabilities that we've seen...And we need time to catch up and resources to do so.
What are some of the harms already experienced because of AI technology?
A lot of them, unfortunately, as many things do, fall with a higher burden on minority populations. So, for example, facial recognition systems work more poorly on Black people and have led to false arrests. Misinformation has gotten amplified by these systems...But it's a spectrum. And as these systems become more and more capable, the types of risks and the levels of those risks almost certainly are going to continue to increase.
AI is such a broad term. What kind of technology are we talking about?
AI is not just any one thing. It's really a set of technologies that allow us to get computers to do things for us, often by learning from data. This can be things as simple as doing elevator scheduling in a more efficient way, or ambulance versus ambulance figuring out which one to dispatch based on a bunch of data we have about the current state of affairs in the city or of the patients.
It can go all the way to the other end of having extremely general agents. So something like ChatGPT where it operates in the domain of language where you can do so many different things. You can write a short story for somebody, you can give them medical advice. You can generate code that could be used to hack and bring up some of these dangers. And what many companies are interested in building is something called AGI, artificial general intelligence, which colloquially, essentially means that it's an AI system that can do most or all of the tasks that a human can do at least at a human level.
veryGood! (87)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Stakes are high for Michigan Wolverines QB J.J. McCarthy after playoff appearance
- Walgreens CEO Roz Brewer resigns after less than 3 years on the job
- Albuquerque police arrest man in 3 shooting deaths during apparent drug deal
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- AI project imagines adult faces of children who disappeared during Argentina’s military dictatorship
- Glowing bioluminescent waves were spotted in Southern California again. Here's how to find them.
- Which stores are open — and closed — on Labor Day
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Are Target, Costco, Walmart open on Labor Day? Store hours for Home Depot, TJ Maxx, more
Ranking
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Yankees' Jasson Dominguez homers off Astros' Justin Verlander in first career at-bat
- Inside Keanu Reeves' Private World: Love, Motorcycles and Epic Movie Stardom After Tragedy
- Labor Day return to office mandates yearn for 'normal.' But the pre-COVID workplace is gone.
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Upset alert for Clemson, North Carolina? College football bold predictions for Week 1
- Man gets 2-year prison sentence in pandemic fraud case to buy alpaca farm
- Meet ZEROBASEONE, K-pop's 'New Kidz on the Block': Members talk debut and hopes for future
Recommendation
2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
What to know about COVID as hospitalizations go up and some places bring back masks
Woman charged in murder-for-hire plot to kill husband
Schooner that sank in Lake Michigan in 1881 found intact, miles off Wisconsin coastline
Travis Hunter, the 2
Experts say a deer at a Wisconsin shooting preserve is infected with chronic wasting disease
Former U.K. intelligence worker confesses to attempted murder of NSA employee
Daylight savings ends in November. Why is it still around?