so mortgage costs rise, too, and there s a return of the 100% house loan. recession s probably off the table, but making ends meet is tough. people come in and sometimes they mention they ve only got so much to spend so, you know, you try and give them the best deal you can. so we have one big question this morning. will it be hard for the country to make a living for years to come? sky high gas and electriticy prices are part of the problem the energy secretary, grant shapps, is here. what would labour do differently? johnny reynolds shadow business secretaryjoins us too. and maybe the economy will be turned upside down by robots anyway tech boss emad mostaque has stopped by. i think this will be a bigger economic impact than the pandemic. it s up to us to decide the direction. and food prices are part of the pressure. the boss of world food programme cindy mccain on why it s a much bigger problem than at our checkouts. we are asking everybody to please support us be
i m not sure what that will be, but i know by next year this technology is everywhere, it s in our phones, it s in our workplaces, and it s moving the nature of society. what could that kind of moment be though? you say when tom hanks caught covid suddenly it was real for everyone, suddenly it was here, and you say there will be some kind of moment like that for al. but what kind of thing could it be, do you think? so, like, last week the republican party had an ai generated attack ad against president biden. thisjust in. we can now call the 2024 presidential race forjoe biden. and that is something that governments have to respond to. does it worry you though that in america we are seeing political parties starting to use ai? yes, it does, and again i think it s an inevitability. technology is advancing anyway. the question is can we standardise it. this is why i want to put a real focus on the training data. the material that s being put into these supercomputers. exactly, rubbish in
he came in for a visit about what a! could really do. so what artificial intelligence could do, was there s this concept of big data, and so it took all your data and then largely was used to serve you ads. this is a new generation of artificial intelligence called generative ai. the best way to think about it is really talented graduates that occasionally turn a bit funny. so they can paint, they can draw, half of all code now generated is al generated, and they understand concepts, and this was the missing part from the logical big data rational part, this principle based analysis, and again, when you use this for writing text, for generating images, audio, it feels very human. so let s talk about some of the things it can do and i know when you are trying to explain to people sometimes use images of a labradoodle. so why not? let s show them to the audience if we can. what do these images show, right? because they are not real, are they? they are not real. so this is one of the mode
tangible, and particularly when you look at healthy food, good cooking, i still think there is a very human role in that and that s what i love about myjob is that it is so physical and in completely cut off from and the web. there is something wonderful about that and wholesome. the route to happiness is to break and share bread. on some sides i think it will be really pivotal, but the actual art and craft of cooking, i m wondering how much. that human contact. i m wondering how much. that human contact- it s i m wondering how much. that human contact. it s interesting, i m wondering how much. that human contact. it s interesting, he i m wondering how much. that human contact. it s interesting, he was - contact. it s interesting, he was talking about humans can do more of the really human stuff and machines will be able to do more of the boring stuff but that has huge risks to jobs, boring stuff but that has huge risks tojobs, right? and in your own company you are already using
recently into this is it realistic? i think it is realistic. i think the government is showing a remarkable level of progression versus, you know, regulation first on that, and you ve got ourselves and deep mind. you have amazing ai talent in london and hopefully moving across the uk. can we trust you? i think everything is open, right? i think there shouldn t have to be a lack of trust if you build open models and you do it in the open and you should be criticised if you do things wrong and hopefully lauded if you do some things right. and lastly, in ten years time, will we look back and think, whether it s chatgpt or stability al or deep mind, will they be as big in our lives as the google, the facebook? they ll be bigger. bigger? the entire of humanity are the stories that make us up and the stories we tell each other, and now we can tell better stories and understand better stories. this is why i think patrick vallance is right, it s bigger than the industrial revolution, and it