David Sachs, the Tsalem intelligence and the White House’s crypto, considers apocalyptic predictions about the rapid access to artificial intelligence (AGI) and the widespread destruction of businesses, and emphasizes that the technology is still highly dependent on human entrance and supervision to deliver real value.
Technology companies’ competition to achieve comprehensive artificial intelligence (human intelligence) has reached its peak, and concerns about its consequences such as widespread unemployment and extinction have increased; However, David Sax offers a more different and realistic narrative.
“The idea that artificial intelligence automatically improves itself and will quickly become a divine superstition is too exaggerated,” he wrote in X. According to him, companies are constantly overwhelming new versions, and models are specializing in areas such as coding or mathematics rather than becoming a whole knowledge.
US Artificial Intelligence Comments on the Future of this Technology
One of the most important parts of Sax’s analysis was to reject the widespread destruction scenario. He argues that these predictions are exaggerated for two reasons: one: Artificial intelligence continues to require instructions and precise human inputs to provide “meaningful commercial value”.. two: Artificial intelligence outputs need to be reviewed and approved by an humanist to ensure their accuracy and efficiency..
Accordingly, Sachs emphasizes an obvious fact: “Apocalypse predictions about losing jobs are as exaggerated as Agi. The truth is that you will not lose your job to artificial intelligence, but you will lose to someone who uses artificial intelligence better than you. “
This is not just David Sach’s view. Other prominent technology people have also raised similar views; Andrew NG, a co -founder of Google Brain, believes that AGI is “overly exaggerated” and there will still be a lot of work that humans can do and are out of artificial intelligence.
Google CEO Sandar Pichai also believes with David Sachs; He prefers to use the term “artificial intelligence” to describe the current situation: Artificial intelligence, which is extremely brilliant in some areas, and in others is prone to elementary mistakes.
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