While tech giants across the world work on materializing the idea of having a generative artificial intelligence (AI) to aid humans in their daily lives, the risk of the nascent technology going rogue remains imminent. Considering this possibility, Tesla and Twitter chief Elon Musk reminded the people of AI’s potential to destroy civilization.
On March 15, Musk’s plan of creating a new AI startup surfaced after the entrepreneur was reportedly assembling a team of AI researchers and engineers. However, Musk continues to highlight the destructive potential of AI — just like any other technology — if it goes into the wrong hands or is being developed with ill intentions.
Anyone who thinks this risk is 0% is an idiot
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 15, 2023According to Musk, AI can be dangerous. In a FOX interview, he said that AI can be more dangerous than mismanaged aircraft design or production maintenance, for example. While acknowledging the low probability, he stated:
“However small one may regard that probability, but it is non-trivial - it has the potential of civilizational destruction.”As Crypto Twitter picked up on the discussion, Musk followed up with strong support for his statement:
“Anyone who thinks this risk is 0% is an idiot.”On the other hand, tech entrepreneurs like Bill Gates remain more optimistic about AI and the positive impacts it can bring to humanity.
Related: Elon Musk reportedly buys thousands of GPUs for Twitter AI project
On April 13, Amazon became the latest tech giant to join the race of creating AI services. Amazon Bedrock allows users to build and scale generative AI apps.
Build & scale your #GenerativeAI apps with Amazon Bedrock. ☁️
Learn how access to leading foundation models makes it easy to build apps quickly while keeping your data private & safe.
https://t.co/mjYtDgC6No #AWS #machinelearning pic.twitter.com/9xYGfTJILs
— Amazon Web Services (@awscloud) April 13, 2023According to a blog post announcing the service, Bedrock allows users to “privately customize foundation models with their own data, and easily integrate and deploy them into their applications.”