Professor Geoffrey Hinton, the Nobel laureate and godfather of artificial intelligence, has warned again in a new interview that artificial intelligence can destroy the human race in the next 3 decades. He previously estimated that there was a 10% chance that this technology would be catastrophic for humanity. Now he says this figure is between 10 and 20 percent.
In an interview with BBC Radio 4, Geoffrey Hinton said that there is a 10-20% chance that artificial intelligence will lead to human extinction in the next 3 decades. Previously, Hinton had said that there is a 10% chance that this technology will destroy humanity. The 77-year-old British computer scientist, who won the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics, called on governments to impose stricter regulations on artificial intelligence companies.
Comments of the godfather of artificial intelligence about the future of mankind
In the BBC Radio 4 program, the presenter asked Geoffrey Hinton if there is still a 10% chance that artificial intelligence will destroy humans; “Not really, 10 to 20 percent,” replied the AI godfather. Hinton says humans have never before had to deal with things smarter than themselves.
Geoffrey Hinton says, “How many examples do you know of something less intelligent controlling something more intelligent? “There are very few examples.” Hinton himself gives the example of mother and child, where the child can control the mother’s behavior. Of course, this happens in line with evolution. Hinton says humans will be like toddlers compared to powerful AI systems. “Imagine yourself and a three-year-old child,” he told the host. (In front of artificial intelligence) we become three-year-old children.”
Geoffrey Hinton says artificial intelligence is developing “much faster” than he expected, and that in the coming years, human intelligence will be equivalent to that of “three-year-old children”. Hinton, whose research has contributed greatly to the development of artificial intelligence, says that when he started working on the technology, he didn’t think it would get here so soon: “I thought we would get here in the future.”
His solution is government oversight: “The only thing that can force big companies to do more safety research is government regulation.” He had previously said that the day artificial intelligence threatens human life, countries will unite against this technology.
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