close

Time to start thinking about governance of superintelligence: OpenAI CEO

OpenAI CEO Altman has said that now is a good time to start thinking about governance of superintelligence -- future AI systems dramatically more capable than even artificial generative intelligence

IANS New Delhi
Sam Altman

Photo: Bloomberg

Listen to This Article

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has said that now is a good time to start thinking about the governance of superintelligence -- future AI systems dramatically more capable than even artificial generative intelligence (AGI).

Altman stressed that the world must mitigate the risks of today's AI technology too, "but superintelligence will require special treatment and coordination".

"Given the picture as we see it now, it's conceivable that within the next 10 years, AI systems will exceed expert skill level in most domains, and carry out as much productive activity as one of today's largest corporations," he said in a blog post along with other OpenAI leaders.

"Given the possibility of existential risk, we can't just be reactive. Nuclear energy is a commonly used historical example of a technology with this property; synthetic biology is another example," he noted.

Last week, Altman admitted that if generative artificial intelligence (AI) technology goes wrong, it can go quite wrong, as US senators expressed their fears about AI chatbots like ChatGPT.

Altman, who testified at a hearing in the US Senate in Washington, DC, said that the AI industry needs to be regulated by the government as AI becomes "increasingly powerful".

Also Read

After ChatGPT, Sam Altman looks to disrupt crypto world through Worldcoin

If AI goes wrong, it can go quite wrong: OpenAI CEO tells US lawmakers

AI tools not far away from being scary, need to get them right: OpenAI CEO

Elon Musk tried to take over OpenAI in 2018, but failed, says report

Italy orders OpenAI to stop processing users' data else face fine

Fake AI image of Pentagon explosion puts paid Twitter Blue in question

Now, you can edit sent messages on WhatsApp: How it works and other details

WhatsApp users can now edit sent messages within a 15-minute window

Getting AI right requires policy framework ensuring accountability: Google

WhatsApp's new feature lets users edit messages with 15-minute time limit

In the blog post, he said that major governments around the world could set up a project that many current efforts become part of, or we could collectively agree that the rate of growth in AI capability at the frontier is limited to a certain rate per year.

"And of course, individual companies should be held to an extremely high standard of acting responsibly. Second, we are likely to eventually need something like an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) for superintelligence efforts," he mentioned.

"Tracking compute and energy usage could go a long way, and give us some hope this idea could actually be implementable," said Altman.

--IANS

na/dpb

 

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: May 23 2023 | 1:59 PM IST

Explore News