it would have on jobs. that s a kind of impact we think we it would have onjobs. we that s a kind of impact we think we it would have on jobs. we at google are committed to making sure we have people in this transition in the most responsible way. we have extensive skills training programmes, wejust extensive skills training programmes, we just chained to our millionth learner this summer, and we will continue to roll out new programmes that would allow people to keep pace with this technological innovation. ., ,., ., to keep pace with this technological innovation. ., ., , ., innovation. how important is it that ounu innovation. how important is it that young people. innovation. how important is it that young people, children, innovation. how important is it that young people, children, in - innovation. how important is it that young people, children, in this - young people, children, in this country and around the world are able to keep up to date and train and learn in terms of
notion that al me, i guess we reject the notion that ai will have a negative impact on jobs. notion that ai will have a negative impact onjobs. often when new technologies arrive there are prophecies are doom, and if you look at history, often these predictions turn out to be quite wrong. it is because people, it is easier for people to imagine existing jobs that might be lost rather than imaginejobs that jobs that might be lost rather than imagine jobs that have not yet been invented because of a new technology. if i look at the ccp, two thirds of our employees are in jobs that did not exist when we set up the company into thousand and two. we as a company have lived through three big technical revolutions, the invention of the internet, the smart phone, and social media, every time we have confronted one of these new technologies we have had to create entire new skill sets. with the internet we need additional marketeers, with the smart phone we needed at the
transparency part. another part is for sure the question of misuse. there is misuse in a technology you have. but in al for sure there will be a discussion where it is misused and what should i be that with that. i would not stress it too much to be honest because it is in development, but definitely will be a question. the biggest fear always comes from an effect which is on jobs. fear always comes from an effect which is onjobs. what fear always comes from an effect which is on jobs. what i normally say, look, all technology waves that have gone through mankind have in the end actually created jobs. there is actually created jobs. there is a fact individually again some jobs but we should look into this area more domestic terms is race. there is this of the wave of fear which is out there that we think old goodness ai will take over the world and we are at risk. we ourselves have given an ai could ask on how we work with al. i think that is one of our questions we have addressed and
but this is serious, isn t it? i think it s serious and this is a question that s occurred with every single technological advancement. like, you can take amazing photos on your google pixel or iphone but there s still more photographers employed now than ever. i think that what happens is a lot of tasks become easier because the easiest thing for us to do as humans is talk like we are now. writing is harder, especially writing concisely, really hard. generating images is the hardest of all and that s power points, that image generation and video. there s a whole crew of experts here. but we face a lot of frustration in ourjobs when we try and convey concepts and when we are trying to talk and tell stories and this reduces the bar for that, so we can tell better stories become more productive. we have to be careful and move fast. well, the chief scientific adviser who hasjust stepped down, sir patrick vallance, he suggested that the impact onjobs could be as big as the industrial revol
banks are well capitalised and that the crisis is contained. britain s competition watchdog is launching a review of the artificial intelligence market , including popular chatbots such as chatgpt. it comes amid growing concerns over the rapid development of generative ai accessible technology that can create text, images and video that is barely distinguishable from output from humans. regulators worldwide are stepping up their scrutiny of ai, given its explosion into general use worldwide and fears over its impact onjobs, industry, copyright, the education sector and privacy among many other areas. the technology expert stephanie hare explains what will be the focus of this review. well, it s going to focus mainly on two things. because this is the cma, the competition markets authority that s going to be focusing on ensuring open competition and consumer protection. that s very, very different than what we ve been hearing many leaders in al in the past few weeks warning about,