On December 5, we’re celebrating WIRED’s 30th anniversary by bringing together the people who have shaped the world we live in, and who are pioneering the tech that will define the next 30 years.
(Bloomberg) Some prominent figures in Silicon Valley have suggested artificial intelligence will eventually create so much wealth that companies could redistribute it to the public, including people whose livelihoods were impacted by AI. But Jaron Lanier sees problems with that plan. Most Read from BloombergBiden, Xi Declare Progress After Concluding Four-Hour SummitIsrael Latest: Biden Defends Hospital Raid, Says Hamas UnbowedHamas Chief Who Deceived Israel Is Target No. 1 Deep UndergroundXi
AI Companies Must Rethink How They Pay For Data, Lanier says bnnbloomberg.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bnnbloomberg.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
“I want to create more, if you like, creative classes of people who are really good at providing fresh data that makes the models work better. So everybody benefits.”
Renowned computer scientist Jaron Lanier believes that artificial intelligence (AI) companies should determine how much an individual’s work contributed to…