Last week an eminent British scientist “lobbed a grenade into the febrile anthill” of artificial intelligence research, said John Naughton in The Observer. Geoffrey Hinton, 75, often dubbed “the godfather of AI”, is a pioneer of the neural network – a computer system inspired by the human brain that learns skills by analysing data. The most powerful new AI chatbots, such as ChatGPT and Google Bard, are built on his work. Hinton’s “bombshell” was that he was leaving Google, where he had worked for ten years, so that he could express his fears about AI. His immediate concern, he told The New York Times, was that it will flood the internet with fake photos, videos and news, so the average person won’t “know what is true anymore”. He worries, too,…
