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AI Threat: Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark and head of the Anthropic Institute, Marina Favaro, say that the biggest risk of the future is that AI will be able to improve itself and create its own next and more powerful versions.
Anthropic has advocated a temporary pause on AI. (Photo: AI)
New Delhi. Is Artificial Intelligence (AI) going to be the biggest threat ever to human civilization? The leaders of Anthropic PBC, one of the world’s leading AI companies, believe the same. He has warned that AI technology is progressing so fast that very soon the command can go out of the hands of humans. Anthropic has even demanded the creation of an industry-wide mechanism to temporarily pause the development of AI globally.
The interesting thing is that while on one hand Anthropic is advocating to stop AI, on the other hand it itself is running at the forefront of this race. The company’s popular AI assistant ‘Claude’ is making waves in the market. Not only this, the company has recently introduced a new model named ‘Mythos’, which is capable of identifying cyber security flaws in the blink of an eye and taking advantage of them (Cyber-Attack).
Jack Clark and Marina Favaro told about the dangers
According to a Bloomberg report, Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark and Anthropic Institute head Marina Favaro wrote in a blog post that the biggest risk of the future is that AI will be able to improve itself and create its own next and more powerful versions. If this happens then the pace of technological development will go out of human control and the role of humans in it will almost end.
‘Arms control’ like nuclear weapons is necessary
According to the blog, “When this rapidly evolving intelligence collides with our human world, interpersonal relationships and established governance systems, the future will be something we cannot even imagine today.” Jack Clark and Marina Favaro wrote that just as international control was imposed on nuclear weapons, something similar would have to be done with AI. However, he believes that creating an “arms control” system for AI is more difficult than stopping missiles.
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