of them are going to appear. the same way 20 years ago you couldn t imagine a youtuber making a living. he also thinks it s highly unlikely that al systems will be more intelligent than humans any time soon. professor yann lecun s words are in sharp contrast to those of the other two men he worked with on the science that underpins modern ai. dr geoffrey hinton retired recently and he said he regretted his life s work. professor yoshua bengio said that he worries about bad actors misusing the tech. both academics and the companies building ai agree that regulation is the best way to try to maximise its benefits and minimise the risks. chatgpt, for example, was unheard of this time last year. yann lecun is confident that ai will be a useful tool rather than a master, and he heralded a new renaissance for humanity. chatgpt couldn t have put it better. zoe kleinman, bbc news. a renaissance maybe but the bbc has been hearing
any time soon. professor yann lecun s words are in sharp contrast to those of the other two men he worked with on the science that underpins modern ai. doctor geoffrey hinton retired recently and he said he regretted his life s work. professor yoshua bengio said that he worries about bad actors misusing the tech. both academics and the companies building ai agree that regulation is the best way to try to maximise its benefits and minimise the risks. chatgpt, for example, was unheard of this time last year. yann lecun is confident that ai will be a useful tool rather than a master, and he heralded a new renaissance for humanity. chatgpt couldn t have put it better. zoe kleinman, bbc news. a renaissance maybe but the bbc has been hearing from one uk worker who has already lost his job to artificial intelligence along with his colleagues. dean meadowcroft and his team of marketing copywriters were asked
it wasn t like all, like, yay, this is amazing. he was very clear-eyed about it and this opportunity was great and the tech could be used for band and he understands that and he s looking at fellow artists and you look at what happened with drake and the weekend who are having to figure out with lawsuits and whatever and make sure the lp is protected and he understands it s a huge risk for the industry and it s smart for him to come out to and give interviews and talk about the thought process and talk about how they came to do this so that way other artists are inspired and not scared by the tech. can you talk about the impact it can have on singers and song writers. people can create the voice they want to hear. it s a huge problem in terms of copyright, sara. right now copyright law protects works and we don t understand works created by a.i. there have been instances like drake and the weeknd in which
that. since the beginning of time. so people want this to be real. this guy sounds reputable, but he is relying on other witnesses. he hasn t seen anything, so i don t buy it. whatever exists exists outside of our time and space, i believe, and maybe when we see things, it could be like little glitches, may be a system, you know, that you get on your computer, little weird things, it could be little system updates, beep, beep, beep. but there are no aliens. jeanine: all right, jesse, woo-woo. the whistle-blower claims there is an arms race where people who can discover, collect those ufo objects or the origins of them. jesse: there is. jeanine: this guy is in the military. jesse: if you are the pentagon and you have spacecraft, what you do, you hoard it. on china, russia, even france to have this stuff. reverse engineer the tech and then you give the patents to these defense contractors and they get rich and then they can
in the development of artifical intelligence has added his voice to warnings about its safety. professor yoshua bengio says he would have prioritised safety over usefulness if he d realised how fast ai would evolve. yesterday ai experts warned that it could lead to the extinction of humanity and lessening that risk should be a global priority. our technology editor zoe kleinman reports. big tech is spending billions on artificial intelligence. photorealistic images generated with applications like midjourney are going viral online. chat bots like chatgpt are answering millions of questions every day. this is the fun face of generative ai. but today another so called godfather of ai, a pioneer of the tech, voiced concerns over its rapid rise, driven by developers. governments need to track what they re doing. they need to be able to audit them. and that sjust a minimum thing