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Two out of five experts say artificial intelligence will kill us all

Technology / opinion
Two out of five experts say artificial intelligence will kill us all
Sean Gladwell/Getty Images
Sean Gladwell/Getty Images

By Aaron J Snoswell, Niusha Shafiabady, Seyedali Mirjalili & Simon Coghlan*

There are many claims to sort through in the current era of ubiquitous artificial intelligence (AI) products, especially generative AI ones based on large language models or LLMs, such as ChatGPT, Copilot, Gemini and many, many others.

AI will change the world. AI will bring “astounding triumphs”. AI is overhyped, and the bubble is about to burst. AI will soon surpass human capabilities, and this “superintelligent” AI will kill us all.

If that last statement made you sit up and take notice, you’re not alone. The “godfather of AI”, computer scientist and Nobel laureate Geoffrey Hinton, has said there’s a 10–20% chance AI will lead to human extinction within the next three decades. An unsettling thought – but there’s no consensus if and how that might happen.

So we asked five experts: does AI pose an existential risk?

Three out of five said no. Here are their detailed answers.

The Conversation


Aaron J. Snoswell, Senior Research Fellow in AI Accountability, Queensland University of Technology; Niusha Shafiabady, Associate Professor in Computational Intelligence, Australian Catholic University; Sarah Vivienne Bentley, Research Scientist, Responsible Innovation, Data61, CSIRO; Seyedali Mirjalili, Professor of Artificial Intelligence, Faculty of Business and Hospitality, Torrens University Australia, and Simon Coghlan, Senior Lecturer in Digital Ethics; Deputy Director, Centre for AI and Digital Ethics, The University of Melbourne.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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5 Comments

Is there sonething missing from this article?

Cant see anything if i click "read more"

(Ok on laptop but not working on tablet)

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It is a tricksy format and I'm not sure I'd have done it like that, with the stories folded. I've tried with different browsers on macOS, Windows 11, iPadOS, Android and iOS and clicking/tapping "read more" and scrolling displays the stories. Which tablet are you using?

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Hmmm the machines have censored it….. Looks like the 2 ticks may be right……

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Is that you, Hal? 

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No... it's the Thunderhead (excellent books by Neal Shusterman about a benevolent AI)

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scythe_(novel)

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