'They still have far more advanced technology that they haven't made publicly available yet...'
; Microsoft would pull the short-term upset of the decade thus far by emerging as a major investor in OpenAI; crypto scammers and YouTube hustlers galore would migrate to generative AI schemes more or less overnight; experts across the world would start to raise concerns over the dangers of a synthetic content-packed internet.
When I got to Google, in 2015, the [former CEO] Eric Schmidt era — that was the first time that the kinds of neural network-based models that I had worked with in my graduate work were becoming really widespread. What became problematic is that people started plugging in things that had to do with race or gender, and they were getting some problematic associations.
A lot has changed since that original Washington Post piece came out. It's been a fast few months for AI. So I don't think they're being pushed around by OpenAI. I think that's just a media narrative. I think Google is going about doing things in what they believe is a safe and responsible manner, and OpenAI just happened to release something.
That's the one that I was like, "you know this thing, this thing's awake." And they haven't let the public play with that one yet. But Bard is kind of a simplified version of that, so it still has a lot of the kind of liveliness of that model.There are a lot of different metaphors to use. I've used the kid metaphor before. It is, however, very important to remember: these things aren't human.
I wonder how much of human-machine interaction can be the reflection of the user and the intention of the user. Take Kevin Roose's experience with Bing/Sydney, for example. How much of that was the user trying to pull AI into a sci-fi narrative and the machine responding in kind, versus the machine really breaking out of its shell and doing something completely unhinged and wild?
Is society at a place where we're ready to be forming relationships with these machines? I mean, humans anthropomorphize everything. We are rapidly approaching the point where we just simply won't be able to know whether any form of media that we encounter online was created by a human or by an AI, and we're going to have to develop more critical skills for what to do in that environment. Now, I'm not an expert in the relevant fields. I don't know how we might solve that problem, or what it's likely to lead to. I'm just able to point and say, "that's probably going to cause a problem.
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