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ChatGPT raises old and new concerns about AI, with Francesca Rossi

ChatGPT raises old and new concerns about AI, with Francesca Rossi

Released Wednesday, 8th March 2023
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ChatGPT raises old and new concerns about AI, with Francesca Rossi

ChatGPT raises old and new concerns about AI, with Francesca Rossi

ChatGPT raises old and new concerns about AI, with Francesca Rossi

ChatGPT raises old and new concerns about AI, with Francesca Rossi

Wednesday, 8th March 2023
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Our guest in this episode is Francesca Rossi. Francesca studied computer science at the University of Pisa in Italy, where she became a professor, before spending 20 years at the University of Padova. In 2015 she joined IBM's T.J. Watson Research Lab in New York, where she is now an IBM Fellow and also IBM's AI Ethics Global Leader.

Francesca is a member of numerous international bodies concerned with the beneficial use of AI, including being a board member at the Partnership on AI, a Steering Committee member and designated expert at the Global Partnership on AI, a member of the scientific advisory board of the Future of Life Institute, and Chair of the international conference on Artificial Intelligence, Ethics, and Society which is being held in Montreal in August this year.

From 2022 until 2024 she holds the prestigious role of the President of the AAAI, that is, the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence. The AAAI has recently held its annual conference, and in this episode, Francesca shares some reflections on what happened there.

Selected follow-ups:
https://researcher.watson.ibm.com/researcher/view.php?person=ibm-Francesca.Rossi2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francesca_Rossi
https://partnershiponai.org/
https://gpai.ai/

Topics in this conversation include:

*) How a one-year sabbatical at the Harvard Radcliffe Institute changed the trajectory of Francesca's life
*) New generative AI systems such as ChatGPT expand previous issues involving bias, privacy, copyright, and content moderation - because they are trained on very large data sets that have not been curated
*) Large language models (LLMs) have been optimised, not for "factuality", but for creating language that is syntactically correct
*) Compared to previous AIs, the new systems impact a wider range of occupations, and they also have major implications for education
*) Are the "AI ethics" and "responsible AI" approaches that address the issues of existing AI systems also the best approaches for the "AI alignment" and "AI safety" issues raised by artificial general intelligence?
*) Different ideas on how future LLMs could acquire mastery, not only over language, but also over logic, inference, and reasoning
*) Options for combining classical AI techniques focussing on knowledge and reasoning, with the data-intensive approaches of LLMs
*) How "foundation models" allow training to be split into two phases, with a shorter supervised phase customising the output from a prior longer unsupervised phase
*) Even experts face the temptation to anthropomorphise the behaviour of LLMs
*) On the other hand, unexpected capabilities have emerged within LLMs
*) The interplay of "thinking fast" and "thinking slow" - adapting, for the context of AI, insights from Daniel Kahneman about human intelligence
*) Cross-fertilisation of ideas from different communities at the recent AAAI conference
*) An extension of that "bridge" theme to involve ideas from outside of AI itself, including the use of methods of physics to observe and interpret LLMs from the outside
*) Prospects for interpretability, explainability, and transparency of AI - and implications for trust and cooperation between humans and AIs
*) The roles played by different international bodies, such as PAI and GPAI
*) Pros and cons of including China in the initial phase of GPAI
*) Designing regulations to be future-proof, with parts that can change quickly
*) An important new goal for AI experts
*) A vision for the next 3-5 years

Music: Spike Protein, by Koi Discovery, available under CC0 1.0 Public Domain Declaration

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From The Podcast

London Futurists

Anticipating and managing exponential impact - hosts David Wood and Calum ChaceCalum Chace is a sought-after keynote speaker and best-selling writer on artificial intelligence. He focuses on the medium- and long-term impact of AI on all of us, our societies and our economies. He advises companies and governments on AI policy.His non-fiction books on AI are Surviving AI, about superintelligence, and The Economic Singularity, about the future of jobs. Both are now in their third editions.He also wrote Pandora's Brain and Pandora’s Oracle, a pair of techno-thrillers about the first superintelligence. He is a regular contributor to magazines, newspapers, and radio.In the last decade, Calum has given over 150 talks in 20 countries on six continents. Videos of his talks, and lots of other materials are available at https://calumchace.com/.He is co-founder of a think tank focused on the future of jobs, called the Economic Singularity Foundation. The Foundation has published Stories from 2045, a collection of short stories written by its members.Before becoming a full-time writer and speaker, Calum had a 30-year career in journalism and in business, as a marketer, a strategy consultant and a CEO. He studied philosophy, politics, and economics at Oxford University, which confirmed his suspicion that science fiction is actually philosophy in fancy dress.David Wood is Chair of London Futurists, and is the author or lead editor of twelve books about the future, including The Singularity Principles, Vital Foresight, The Abolition of Aging, Smartphones and Beyond, and Sustainable Superabundance.He is also principal of the independent futurist consultancy and publisher Delta Wisdom, executive director of the Longevity Escape Velocity (LEV) Foundation, Foresight Advisor at SingularityNET, and a board director at the IEET (Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies). He regularly gives keynote talks around the world on how to prepare for radical disruption. See https://deltawisdom.com/.As a pioneer of the mobile computing and smartphone industry, he co-founded Symbian in 1998. By 2012, software written by his teams had been included as the operating system on 500 million smartphones.From 2010 to 2013, he was Technology Planning Lead (CTO) of Accenture Mobility, where he also co-led Accenture’s Mobility Health business initiative.Has an MA in Mathematics from Cambridge, where he also undertook doctoral research in the Philosophy of Science, and a DSc from the University of Westminster.

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